I explore whether the absence of school sanitation infrastructure impedes educational attainment, particularly among pubescent-age girls, using a national Indian school latrine construction initiative and administrative school-level data. School latrine construction substantially increases enrollment of pubescent-age girls, though predominately when providing sex-specific latrines. Privacy and safety appear to matter sufficiently for pubescent-age girls that only sex-specific latrines reduce gender disparities. Any latrine substantially benefits younger girls and boys, who may be particularly vulnerable to sickness from uncontained waste. Academic test scores did not increase following latrine construction, however. Estimated increases in enrollment are similar across the substantial variation in Indian district characteristics.

Read on the American Economic Journal

More on this topic

BFI Working Paper·Feb 14, 2025

The Social Construction of Race during Reconstruction

Anjali Adukia, Richard Hornbeck, Daniel Keniston, and Benjamin Lualdi
Topics: Economic Mobility & Poverty
BFI Working Paper·Feb 11, 2025

Income Equality in The Nordic Countries: Myths, Facts, and Lessons

Magne Mogstad, Kjell G. Salvanes, and Gaute Torsvik
Topics: Economic Mobility & Poverty, Employment & Wages
BFI Working Paper·Feb 4, 2025

Local GDP Estimates Around the World

Esteban Rossi-Hansberg and Jialing Zhang
Topics: COVID-19, Economic Mobility & Poverty