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Childcare availability and female labor supply Anna Lovasz - Agnes Szabo-Morvai The impact of day-care services on mothers’ employment, fertility, and.

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Presentation on theme: "Childcare availability and female labor supply Anna Lovasz - Agnes Szabo-Morvai The impact of day-care services on mothers’ employment, fertility, and."— Presentation transcript:

1 Childcare availability and female labor supply Anna Lovasz - Agnes Szabo-Morvai The impact of day-care services on mothers’ employment, fertility, and redistribution in Visegrad countries - Workshop Budapest, March 30-31, 2012

2 Research question and literature How does the lack of formal childcare availability constrain female labor supply? – International evidence that it does constrain: Apps&Rees 2001; Kimmel 1992,2001; Lokshin 2004 – Who is most affected by constraint? By income, education level, region/settlement type, family status, age – Is the market for private daycare „stepping in” where public is insufficient? Is this increasing inequality based on affordability?

3 Relevance Policy issues: – Where to build kindergartens? – Who should pay and how much for nurseries? – Should market for private daycare be encouraged more (decrease administrative barriers, etc)?  Labor market activity – Bick, 2010: lack of subsidized childcare is a barrier to female labor supply – Connelly, 1992: higher child care costs are the primary reason of lower participation rate of mothers  Fertility – Apps & Rees, 2001, Del Boca and Sauer, 2009 : countries with better prospects for mothers of small children (availability of childcare and flexible jobs), have higher female labor supply and fertility rate

4 Childcare availability

5 Data Combine three data sources, Hungary 2002-2011: Labor Force Survey – Household composition, labor status, children – Rotating panel, at most 6 quarters’ data about one household T-STAR Geographical data – Nursery and kindergarten availability, family daycare (2008-2010), commuting – Matched to LFS using settlement codes Wage and Employment Survey – Expected wage according to education, industry, etc.

6 Childcare scarcity in Hungary Scarcity Kindergarten: 69% Nursery: 99% Utilization rate = enrolled children / available places

7 Methodology: what happens at age 3? Increase in availability between nursery and kindergarten  effect on L S ? – Kindergarten should accept all children above 3 if open places left – Largest enrollment wave in September – Continuous enrollment if unfilled places typically in lower quality kindergartens often wait until next September, when kids leave for school Problem: other effects at age 3 – Maternity leave ends – Willingness to separate from child?

8 Factors affecting childcare usage and mother’s labor market participation when child turns 3 Childcare availability Willingness to separate (Blaskó) -This factor is present and has a strong effect -Its timing is uncertain -Continuous variable Maternity leave -High-sum maternity support ends at age 2, no work allowed -Low-sum maternity support (~ 100 EUR) ends at age 3 -Mothers are allowed to work and receive low-sum support

9 Facts and Figures I.

10 Facts and Figures II.

11 Facts and Figures III. Work Don’t want; N.l. b/c childcare problem Don’t want; N.l. b/c NO childcare problem

12 Facts and Figures IV. Working Available Not looking b/c of child Not looking, but want

13 Ideal experiment and problems Population of women who want a child (unobservable) Assign children to them randomly (no sample selection) Randomly offer them (group 1) or not (group 2) childcare (childcare availability is exogenous)  Compare the activity rate of group 1 & 2 Problems in real life data: – Selection into motherhood – Endogeneity of childcare availability – Concurrent „treatment”: end of maternity leave Usually tackled by parametric, multi-equation models – Selection into motherhood is usually not handled by these  We plan to take an approach that requires less behavioral assumptions but handles these problems

14 Quasi-experiment: regression discontinuity design Random assignment would solve selection problem Can think of mothers of children aged 2.7-3.3 as very similar, except: – Under 3: only nursery, low childcare availability (7% on average) – Over 3: kindergarten, high availability (83% on average) In this „discontinuity sample”, assignment is random – Child age not correlated to characteristics that determine participation – Except: willingness to outsource daycare

15 Strategy 1 Kr: regional kindergarten availability: available kg places / number of children (or # of chilod-bearing age women) Nr: regional nursery school availability Gamma i: other parameters that affect availability

16 Local Average Treatment Effect Age of youngest child Activity rate 3 LATE Observed Unobserved

17 Preliminary results: activity rate by level of change in childcare availability Availability: number of places / number of children in population of given age Change in availability if: No nursery, but kindergarten available OR availability of kindergarten is higher

18 Strategy 2 Exploit gap between when child turns 3 (end of maternity leave) and kindergarten enrollment month (mostly in September)? Maternity leave Enrollm.01Total 03,13455,46858,602 159,266059,266 Total62,40055,468117,868

19 Preliminary results: activity by regular or late enrollment

20 Strategy 3 Available places in 2010: – in nurseries : 26.000 – in family daycare: 4.000 appr. 15% increase in available places since 2007, with geographical differences Source of variation: – geographical and time differences of childcare availability – regional differences in availability growth

21 Issues/questions Develop model and RD design: what is treatment?  Exogenous change in change in availability (Ex: retirement of kindergarten teacher leads to closing)  Reduced form: we observe childcare availability and labor market participation, but do not observe actual enrollment for given mothers Female labor supply or household decision model?  literature shows decisions made jointly when young children present (Lundberg 1988) Fertility decision not modeled Include family members: informal childcare Childcare availability or affordability? Availability at location: living or working?  use Kertesi et al.: composed small regions based on commuting data Availability of flexible jobs?

22 ANY COMMENTS ARE WELCOME! Thank you for your attention,


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