Parental Job Loss and Children’s School Performance Mari Rege, Kjetil Telle and Mark Votruba.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Trade and Inequality Nina Pavcnik Dartmouth College BREAD, CEPR, and NBER WTO-ILO Conference Research on Global Trade and Employment.
Advertisements

Place and Economic Activity: Key issues from the area effects debate Nick Buck ISER, University of Essex.
The Economic Consequences of U.S. Immigration: Part 1.
Employment quality in the OECD Better Life Initiative Anne Saint-Martin Meeting of the Group of Experts on Measuring Quality of Employment September.
JOBS IN MAINE: CONDITIONS & OUTLOOK Labor Market Information and Online Resources Maine Career Development Association Annual Conference June 6, 2014 Ruth.
Domestic Violence, Parenting, and Behavior Outcomes of Children Chien-Chung Huang Rutgers University.
Marriage, Work & Economics Michael Itagaki Sociology 275, Marriage and Family.
Chapter 12 Work and Family. Chapter Outline  The Labor Force - A Social Invention  The Traditional Model: Provider Husbands Homemaking Wives  Women.
Education and entitlement to household income. A gendered longitudinal analysis of British couples Jerome De Henau and Susan Himmelweit IAFFE annual conference,
Gender and Economic Isolation in an Era of Globalization Jennifer C. Olmsted Dept. of Economics Drew University
Copyright EM LYON Par accord du CFC Cession et reproduction interdites Research in Entrepreneurship- The problem of unobserved heterogeneity Frédéric Delmar.
Identifying Non-Cooperative Behavior Among Spouses: Child Outcomes in Migrant-Sending Households Session 4E: Growth, Jobs and Earnings May 15, 2008 Joyce.
DEMOGRAPHIC TRANSITION AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT AT THE LOCAL LEVEL IN BRAZIL Ernesto F. L. Amaral Advisor: Dr. Joseph E. Potter Population Research Center.
Money talks. Social Return on Investment The economic and social value created by social firms Sheila Durie The SROI Network and the SROI Project in Scotland.
Faculty of Management, Economics and Social Sciences Research Institute for Sociology Michael Wagner On the links between unemployment, partnership stability.
The impact of job loss on family dissolution Silvia Mendolia, Denise Doiron School of Economics, University of New South Wales Introduction Objectives.
The impact of job loss on family mental health
We turn to short-run output, the gap between actual GDP and potential GDP Fluctuations in economic activity can be costly The rate of inflation tends to.
1 James P. Smith Childhood Health and the Effects on Adult SES Outcomes.
(c) 2006 by Pearson Education. All Rights Reserved. American Families Beirne-Smith et al. Mental Retardation, Seventh Edition Copyright ©2006 Pearson Education,
BACKGROUND RESEARCH QUESTIONS  Does the time parents spend with children differ according to parents’ occupation?  Do occupational differences remain.
The incidence of Mandated Maternity Benefits
How large are returns to schooling? Hint: money isn't everything Philip Oreopoulos and Kjell G. Salvanes September 2009.
1 WELL-BEING AND ADJUSTMENT OF SPONSORED AGING IMMIGRANTS Shireen Surood, PhD Supervisor, Research & Evaluation Information & Evaluation Services Addiction.
Poverty: Facts, Causes and Consequences Hilary Hoynes University of California, Davis California Symposium on Poverty October 2009.
Presented By: Dr. Ehsan Latif School of Business and Economics Thompson Rivers University, BC, Canada.
JOBS IN MAINE: CONDITIONS & OUTLOOK Labor Market Information and Online Resources Career Development Facilitator Training March 7, 2014 Ruth Pease Economic.
Unpaid Care and Labor Supply of Middle-aged Men and Women in Urban China Lan Liu Institute of Population Research, Peking University Xiaoyuan Dong Department.
1 Health Status and The Retirement Decision Among the Early-Retirement-Age Population Shailesh Bhandari Economist Labor Force Statistics Branch Housing.
The Effects of Poverty on Female-Headed Households Tammy Howard University of Tennessee at Chattanooga BSW Social Work Program Spring 2007 SOCW 376.
Are workers more vulnerable in tradable industries? ETSG, Birmingham, September 2013 Kent Eliasson Growth Analysis and Umeå University Pär Hansson.
The ECB Survey of Professional Forecasters Luca Onorante European Central Bank* (updated from A. Meyler and I.Rubene) October 2009 *The views and opinions.
Growth Firms Project Chris Parsley, Manager Small Business Policy Branch Industry Canada From Data to Research for Policy OECD Growth Firms Meeting.
Effects of Income Imputation on Traditional Poverty Estimates The views expressed here are the authors and do not represent the official positions.
The American Class Structure. © Pine Forge Press, an Imprint of SAGE Publications, Inc., 2011 How Many Classes Are There? According to modern historians,
Trends in Employment How many hours weekly do we work for pay?
The Impact of Air Pollution on Infant Mortality: Evidence from Geographic Variation in Pollution Shocks Induced by a Recession Kenneth Y. Chay and Michael.
LABOR MARKET INDICATORS  Current Population Survey Every month, 1,600 interviewers working on a joint project of the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS)
Social Costs of the Asian Economic Crisis Yinglan Tan — Department of Economics, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Faculty Advisor:
A presentation for the Women’s Institute for a Secure Retirement February 28, 2008 Barbara D. Bovbjerg Director Education, Workforce, and Income Security.
Centre for Market and Public Organisation Understanding the effect of public policy on fertility Mike Brewer (Institute for Fiscal Studies) Anita Ratcliffe.
CHILDREN AND FAMILIES: TIME MANAGEMENT AND PERCEPTION OF STRESS Elsa Fontainha ISEG – Technical University of Lisbon – Portugal 3 rd International Conference.
Early Childhood Education Need for quality child care.
Copyright restrictions may apply Household, Family, and Child Risk Factors After an Investigation for Suspected Child Maltreatment: A Missed Opportunity.
Intergenerational Poverty and Mobility. Intergenerational Mobility Leblanc’s Random Family How does this excerpt relate to what we have been talking about?
The Great Recession, the Social Safety Net, and Economic Security for Older Americans Richard W. Johnson and Karen E. Smith Urban Institute Presented at.
Economics of Gender Chapter 11 Assist.Prof.Dr.Meltem INCE YENILMEZ.
Comments on: “The Effects of Income Shocks on Child Labor and Conditional Cash Transfer Programs as an Insurance Mechanism for Schooling” by Monica Ospina.
Work and Families Mothers enter labor force Implications for family life Marital power and work Role overload, conflict, and spillover Work-family life.
Chapter 15 Families. Chapter Outline Defining the Family Comparing Kinship Systems Sociological Theory and Families Diversity Among Contemporary American.
The Health Consequences of Incarceration Michael Massoglia Penn State University.
© 2011 Pearson Education Jobs and Unemployment 21 When you have completed your study of this chapter, you will be able to 1Define the unemployment rate.
1 REGRESSION ANALYSIS WITH PANEL DATA: INTRODUCTION A panel data set, or longitudinal data set, is one where there are repeated observations on the same.
Changing Demographic Trends & Families in the U.S. Lecture 2 Introduction to Family Studies.
Marriage, Work, and Economics
Temperament Constitutionally based individual differences in behavioral characteristics that are relatively consistent across situations and over time.
Chapter 1 Introduction to Labor Economics Copyright © 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
Chapter 2: The Role of Economics
© 2011 Pearson Education Jobs and Unemployment 6 When you have completed your study of this chapter, you will be able to 1Define the unemployment rate.
Multiple Regression The equation that describes how the dependent variable y is related to the independent variables: x1, x2, xp and error term e.
Comments on: ”Educating Children of Immigrants: Closing the Gap in Norwegian Schools” The Nordic Economic Policy Review Conference 2011 Lena Nekby Department.
Children’s Emotional and Behavioral Problems and Their Parents’ Labor Supply Patrick Richard, Ph.D., M.A. Nicholas C. Petris Center on Health Markets and.
STRUCTURAL MODELS Eva Hromádková, Applied Econometrics JEM007, IES Lecture 10.
Employment Sorting by Size: The Role of Health Insurance Lan Liang and Barbara Schone.
The Economic Costs of Educational Inequality in Developing Countries Wael Moussa, Ph.D. Carina Omoeva, Ph.D. Charles Gale March 2016 FHI 360 Education.
Day care refers to care for children under school age, generally at a day nursery or by a childminder It does NOT refer to full time (i.e. 24-hour-a-
Culture: An Empirical Investigation of Beliefs, Work, and Fertility
University of California, Los Angeles and NBER
Families and Work  .
The incidence of Mandated Maternity Benefits
Presentation transcript:

Parental Job Loss and Children’s School Performance Mari Rege, Kjetil Telle and Mark Votruba

Job Loss Job loss is an endemic feature of market economies as producers periodically re-optimize in response to changing market conditions. While such re-optimization can be crucial for long term economic performance, job loss can be detrimental to affected workers. Convincing evidence indicates that job loss increases the likelihood of future unemployment, welfare program participation and divorce, and negatively affects future earnings and health.

Are Children Affected? Why? Virtually no research has investigated a causal effect of parental job loss on children. Parental job loss could affect a child’s school performance through a number of possible mechanisms. –Family income –Parental stress or depression –Parental divorce or relocation –Family time

Outline Two Challenges –Omitted Variable Problems –Data availability Empirical Strategy –Focus on job losses that are associated with plant closures –Identifying assumption: plant closure events are determined by exogenous economic shocks and are independent of unobservable determinants of children’s school performance Empirical Results –Fathers’ plant closure leads to a substantial decline in children’s graduation-year grade point average –In contrast, mothers’ exposure leads to improved school performance Mechanism Discussion –Our findings appear to be consistent with sociological “role theories” –Parents seem unable to fully shield their children from the stress caused by threats to the father’s traditional role as breadwinner –Mothers seem to respond to job loss by allocating greater attention towards child rearing

Omitted Variable Bias Omitted variable bias arises if a parent’s exposure to job loss is correlated with unobservables that also affect child outcomes, such as: –The parent’s productivity (e.g. lazy, disorganized) –Experience of an unobserved shock (e.g. sudden decline in parent’s health). To circumvent the most obvious forms of omitted variable bias, we focus on job losses that are associated with plant closures.

Data Availability The task requires data on parental labor force participation, linked to relevant outcomes for the children. Our analysis utilizes two databases –FD-trygd: A comprehensive, longitudinal register database containing annual records for every person in Norway. –A database containing the school grades of all graduating secondary students in Norway from 2003 to Importantly, the two databases contain personal identifiers allowing us to link each child’s educational outcomes to the parents’ records.

Empirical Strategy Sample: Graduating secondary students, 10th graders, whose fathers at the end of year 7 (i.e. middle of 7th grade) were employed in a plant that either closed during the next two years or was stable during this period. The parameter of interest is the estimated plant closure coefficient, , which captures the incremental decrease in school performance from plant closure in a non-booming municipality relative to children whose father is working in a stable plant.

Booming and Non-booming Municipalities During our period of study the Norwegian economy was thriving and several municipalities were booming with unusually low unemployment rates. In these municipalities we expect the effect of plant closure to be smaller since new job opportunities are abundant. We refer to a municipality with less than three percent unemployment at the end of year 8 as a “booming municipality”.

Identifying Assumption Assumption: Plant closure events are independent of unobserved determinants of children’s school performance. This identifying assumption may be difficult to defend for several reasons: –Plant closures may be associated with particular industries and children of workers in these industries may be more likely to perform poorly at school. –Plant closure events may be concentrated in municipalities with children of low school performance or in areas with poor public schools. –Workers with less parenting resources may be concentrated in failing plants.

Closing and Stable Plants Based on FD trygds employment records, we constructed plant-level employment counts at the end of years 7 and 9. We define: –Closing plant: A plant reducing employment from year 7 to 9 by more than 90 percent. –Stable plant: A plant with no reduction in employment from year 7 to 9.

Grade Outcomes Based on the educational records, we constructed a summary measure of each 10th grader’s performance in the 11 graduating subjects. It is not obvious how individual marks should be aggregated into one summary measure (Hægeland et. al 2004). We adopt the summary measure of grade point average (GPA) constructed by Hægeland et al. (2004) that puts weights on the different subjects in accordance with the number of teaching hours.

Sample Restrictions Our analytic sample consists of all native 10th graders graduating during Sample restrictions: –Restrict the sample to 10th graders whose father at the end of year 7 (i.e. middle of 7th grade) was employed full time in a plant that either closed during the next two years or was stable. –Restrict the sample to children where the father was employed in plants that were stable during year 7 with more than five FTEs at the end of year 4. –Exclude children of fathers with less than one year of tenure in his year 7 plant or where the father received assistance that should have precluded full-time employment. –Exclude all children with unmarried parents at the end of year 7 –Exclude all children with fathers working in the educational sector Applying these restrictions provided us with a sample of 10,344 tenth graders.

Main Results: Effect of Plant Closure in Father’s Plant

Robustness Checks

Mechanism Investigation

Effect of Plant Closure in Mother’s Plant

Discussion The distinct effects we observe for fathers’ and mothers’ plant closure can best be interpreted in light of spousal role theories from the field of sociology. These theories have emphasized how job displacement can lead to shifts of roles within the household, resulting in different consequences depending on the sex of the affected spouse. –For the father, displacement can constitute serious social distress if he fails to fulfill the traditional role as breadwinner. –For mothers, however, weaker attachment to the labor market and the social acceptability of non-employment- based roles reduces the stress associated with job loss, as they more easily adapt to displacement by shifting greater energy towards their role as care givers.