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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2011 Dec 14.
Published in final edited form as: J Hum Resour. 2008 Summer;43(3):511–552.

Table 8.

Impact of ARV Therapy on Components of Labor Supply

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6)

Dependent variable: Labor force participation (past wk.) Income earned (past mth.)

Wage Farm Business Wage Farm Business

Individual fixed effects Individual fixed effects

Round 2 * Patient on ARVs < 100 days in Round 1 0.048 (1.10) 0.075 (1.21) 0.192 (3.05)*** −140.112 (0.53) −1,261.168 (2.13)** 628.171 (1.70)*
Round 2 * Patient on ARVs > 100 days in Round 1 0.003 (0.06) 0.005 (0.09) 0.008 (0.19) −142.712 (0.57) 121.958 (0.18) 147.198 (0.57)
Constant 0.159 (7.51)*** 0.829 (27.02)*** 0.184 (6.69)*** 915.661 (5.86)*** −1,079.609 (0.67) 610.083 (2.97)***
Observations 2848 2848 2848 2848 2848 2848
R-squared 0.82 0.70 0.74 0.83 0.52 0.79

Notes: Errors clustered at the household level for each round and robust t-statistics in parentheses (* significant at 10%; ** significant at 5%; *** significant at 1%). Dependent variable Labor force participation indicates whether the individual was engaged in specific labor market activity (wage, farm, or business) in the past week and Income earned is total income earned from specific income labor market activity (wage, farm, or business) in the past month. Regressions include individual fixed effects, round 2 indicator variable, and month-of-interview indicator variables. The sample sizes in each regression are smaller than 2,954 because information on income earned in each of three activities (wage labor, farm labor, and business labor) is not available for all adults in the random sample and ARV sample.