Abstract
Does a legal change in women’s inheritance rights have long-term effects on child health outcomes?
This paper examines the effect of an improvement in women’s inheritance rights on child nutritional
health outcomes in India using a difference-in-differences estimation approach. We use the staggered implementation
of the Hindu Succession (Amendment) Act, 2005 to investigate the impact of the reform on anthropometric
indictors of child health: being underweight, stunted, and wasted. The findings of this study reveal that
an improvement in women’s inheritance rights has a positive impact on children’s health and reduces the
probability of nutritional deficiency in the child. We identify mechanisms such as increased educational levels,
better marital outcomes, and improved intrahousehold bargaining power of women as potential pathways
through which inheritance rights affect child nutritional health outcomes. The results of the paper lend credence
to growing evidence that legal recognition of women’s inheritance rights can have sustained and secondgeneration
effects, in spite of poor enforcement mechanisms and persistence of deep-rooted societal bias against
women holding property.