Physical punishment as a predictor of early cognitive development: Evidence from econometric approaches.

Citation:

Jorge Cuartas, Dana McCoy, Andrew Grogan-Kaylor, and Elizabeth Gershoff. 9/8/2020. “Physical punishment as a predictor of early cognitive development: Evidence from econometric approaches.” Developmental Psychology. Publisher's Version

Abstract:

This study estimates the effect of physical punishment on the cognitive development of 1,167 low-income Colombian children (Mage = 17.8 months old) using 3 analytic strategies: lagged-dependent variables, a difference-in-differences-like approach (DD), and a novel strategy combining matching with a DD-like approach. Across approaches, physical punishment at ages 9–26 months predicted reductions in children’s cognitive development of 0.08–0.21 SD at ages 27–46 months. These results, plus null results of falsification tests, strengthen the argument that physical punishment leads to slower cognitive growth and illustrate the utility of alternative statistical methods to reduce problems of selection bias in developmental research. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved)