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The psychological toll of life shocks: evidence from Ethiopia

Young people in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) are coming of age amid economic, environmental, and social crises. At the same time, there is growing recognition of the role an individual's psychological state plays in shaping their socioeconomic and developmental outcomes. It is, therefore...

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Main Author: Freund, Richard
Other Authors: Leibbrandt, Murray
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: School of Economics 2026
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access_status_str Open Access
author Freund, Richard
author2 Leibbrandt, Murray
author_browse Freund, Richard
Leibbrandt, Murray
author_facet Leibbrandt, Murray
Freund, Richard
author_sort Freund, Richard
collection Thesis
description Young people in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) are coming of age amid economic, environmental, and social crises. At the same time, there is growing recognition of the role an individual's psychological state plays in shaping their socioeconomic and developmental outcomes. It is, therefore, critical to understand whether, how, and through what channels unexpected negative shocks affect young people's psychological state. In the substantive chapters of this thesis, I utilise data from Young Lives to explore the psychological effects of exposure to various adverse life events in Ethiopia, a low-income country. The first empirical chapter leverages a natural experiment – the 2021 drought – to assess the impact of drought exposure on young adults' experiences of anxiety and depression. My analysis applies a difference-in-differences strategy and couples rainfall data with longitudinal survey data on mental health. Results contribute evidence on how rainfall variability might perpetuate a psychological poverty trap and help identify populations most in need of support during periods of low rainfall. In the second substantive chapter, I investigate the effects of exposure to violent conflict during Ethiopia's recent civil war on young adults' trust. By employing novel individual-level conflict data collected via audio computer-assisted self-interviewing technology, my analysis helps reconcile contradictory findings in the existing literature. It underscores the importance of considering the resilience of social networks in post-conflict settings. In my third contribution, I explore the associations between the Productive Safety Net Programme (PSNP) and the development of foundational cognitive skills. My findings highlight mechanisms through which the PSNP may positively influence cognitive development, focusing on its effectiveness in mitigating nutritional deficits caused by early- life rainfall shocks. A connecting contribution of these chapters is to provide empirical evidence, through rigorous economic analysis, that builds an understanding of whether and how negative life shocks may impact the psychological state of young people in LMICs. This evidence can be inserted into dialogues that shape policy responses in the aftermath of such events, which ultimately have the potential to disrupt psychological and socio-economic inequities. Although concerning different facets of the psychological state, all chapters contribute to quantifying the psychological effects of exposure to negative shocks in ways that have not previously been explored in-depth in similar contexts.
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provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/43392 The psychological toll of life shocks: evidence from Ethiopia Freund, Richard Leibbrandt, Murray Favara, Marta life psychological Ethiopia Young people in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) are coming of age amid economic, environmental, and social crises. At the same time, there is growing recognition of the role an individual's psychological state plays in shaping their socioeconomic and developmental outcomes. It is, therefore, critical to understand whether, how, and through what channels unexpected negative shocks affect young people's psychological state. In the substantive chapters of this thesis, I utilise data from Young Lives to explore the psychological effects of exposure to various adverse life events in Ethiopia, a low-income country. The first empirical chapter leverages a natural experiment – the 2021 drought – to assess the impact of drought exposure on young adults' experiences of anxiety and depression. My analysis applies a difference-in-differences strategy and couples rainfall data with longitudinal survey data on mental health. Results contribute evidence on how rainfall variability might perpetuate a psychological poverty trap and help identify populations most in need of support during periods of low rainfall. In the second substantive chapter, I investigate the effects of exposure to violent conflict during Ethiopia's recent civil war on young adults' trust. By employing novel individual-level conflict data collected via audio computer-assisted self-interviewing technology, my analysis helps reconcile contradictory findings in the existing literature. It underscores the importance of considering the resilience of social networks in post-conflict settings. In my third contribution, I explore the associations between the Productive Safety Net Programme (PSNP) and the development of foundational cognitive skills. My findings highlight mechanisms through which the PSNP may positively influence cognitive development, focusing on its effectiveness in mitigating nutritional deficits caused by early- life rainfall shocks. A connecting contribution of these chapters is to provide empirical evidence, through rigorous economic analysis, that builds an understanding of whether and how negative life shocks may impact the psychological state of young people in LMICs. This evidence can be inserted into dialogues that shape policy responses in the aftermath of such events, which ultimately have the potential to disrupt psychological and socio-economic inequities. Although concerning different facets of the psychological state, all chapters contribute to quantifying the psychological effects of exposure to negative shocks in ways that have not previously been explored in-depth in similar contexts. 2026-06-25T13:12:26Z 2026-06-25T13:12:26Z 2026 2026-06-25T13:09:43Z Thesis / Dissertation Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/43392 en eng application/pdf School of Economics Faculty of Commerce University of Cape Town
spellingShingle life
psychological
Ethiopia
Freund, Richard
The psychological toll of life shocks: evidence from Ethiopia
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title The psychological toll of life shocks: evidence from Ethiopia
title_full The psychological toll of life shocks: evidence from Ethiopia
title_fullStr The psychological toll of life shocks: evidence from Ethiopia
title_full_unstemmed The psychological toll of life shocks: evidence from Ethiopia
title_short The psychological toll of life shocks: evidence from Ethiopia
title_sort psychological toll of life shocks evidence from ethiopia
topic life
psychological
Ethiopia
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/43392
work_keys_str_mv AT freundrichard thepsychologicaltolloflifeshocksevidencefromethiopia
AT freundrichard psychologicaltolloflifeshocksevidencefromethiopia