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Maternal Employment and Child Outcomes: Evidence from the Irish Marriage Bar

Research output: Working paper

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Maternal Employment and Child Outcomes: Evidence from the Irish Marriage Bar. / Mosca, Irene; O'Sullivan, Vincent Aidan; Wright, Robert.
Lancaster: The Department of Economics, 2017. (Economics Working Papers series).

Research output: Working paper

Harvard

Mosca, I, O'Sullivan, VA & Wright, R 2017 'Maternal Employment and Child Outcomes: Evidence from the Irish Marriage Bar' Economics Working Papers series, The Department of Economics, Lancaster.

APA

Mosca, I., O'Sullivan, V. A., & Wright, R. (2017). Maternal Employment and Child Outcomes: Evidence from the Irish Marriage Bar. (Economics Working Papers series). The Department of Economics.

Vancouver

Mosca I, O'Sullivan VA, Wright R. Maternal Employment and Child Outcomes: Evidence from the Irish Marriage Bar. Lancaster: The Department of Economics. 2017 Sept. (Economics Working Papers series).

Author

Mosca, Irene ; O'Sullivan, Vincent Aidan ; Wright, Robert. / Maternal Employment and Child Outcomes: Evidence from the Irish Marriage Bar. Lancaster : The Department of Economics, 2017. (Economics Working Papers series).

Bibtex

@techreport{23d3632953244866bc5b44e7d7a6e702,
title = "Maternal Employment and Child Outcomes: Evidence from the Irish Marriage Bar",
abstract = "This paper empirically investigates the relationship between maternal employment and child outcomes using micro-data collected in the third wave of The Irish Longitudinal Study on Ageing. A novel source of exogenous variation in the employment decisions of women is used to investigate this relationship. Between the 1920s and the 1970s, women working in certain sectors or in certain jobs were required to leave paid employment upon getting married in Ireland. The majority of women affected by this “Marriage Bar” then became mothers and never returned to work, or returned only after several years. Regression analysis is used to compare the educational attainment of the children of mothers who were required to leave employment on marriage because of the Marriage Bar to the educational attainment of the children of mothers who were not required to do so. It is found that the children of mothers affected by the Marriage Bar have a much higher probability of completing university education than the children of mothers who were not. The difference is around seven percentage points. This is a sizeable effect when compared to the observation that about 40% of the children in the sample completed university education. This effect is found to be robust to alternative specifications that include variables aimed at controlling for differences in maternal occupation and personality traits and differences in paternal education.",
keywords = "marriage, mother, employment, child, education",
author = "Irene Mosca and O'Sullivan, {Vincent Aidan} and Robert Wright",
year = "2017",
month = sep,
language = "English",
series = "Economics Working Papers series",
publisher = "The Department of Economics",
type = "WorkingPaper",
institution = "The Department of Economics",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - Maternal Employment and Child Outcomes: Evidence from the Irish Marriage Bar

AU - Mosca, Irene

AU - O'Sullivan, Vincent Aidan

AU - Wright, Robert

PY - 2017/9

Y1 - 2017/9

N2 - This paper empirically investigates the relationship between maternal employment and child outcomes using micro-data collected in the third wave of The Irish Longitudinal Study on Ageing. A novel source of exogenous variation in the employment decisions of women is used to investigate this relationship. Between the 1920s and the 1970s, women working in certain sectors or in certain jobs were required to leave paid employment upon getting married in Ireland. The majority of women affected by this “Marriage Bar” then became mothers and never returned to work, or returned only after several years. Regression analysis is used to compare the educational attainment of the children of mothers who were required to leave employment on marriage because of the Marriage Bar to the educational attainment of the children of mothers who were not required to do so. It is found that the children of mothers affected by the Marriage Bar have a much higher probability of completing university education than the children of mothers who were not. The difference is around seven percentage points. This is a sizeable effect when compared to the observation that about 40% of the children in the sample completed university education. This effect is found to be robust to alternative specifications that include variables aimed at controlling for differences in maternal occupation and personality traits and differences in paternal education.

AB - This paper empirically investigates the relationship between maternal employment and child outcomes using micro-data collected in the third wave of The Irish Longitudinal Study on Ageing. A novel source of exogenous variation in the employment decisions of women is used to investigate this relationship. Between the 1920s and the 1970s, women working in certain sectors or in certain jobs were required to leave paid employment upon getting married in Ireland. The majority of women affected by this “Marriage Bar” then became mothers and never returned to work, or returned only after several years. Regression analysis is used to compare the educational attainment of the children of mothers who were required to leave employment on marriage because of the Marriage Bar to the educational attainment of the children of mothers who were not required to do so. It is found that the children of mothers affected by the Marriage Bar have a much higher probability of completing university education than the children of mothers who were not. The difference is around seven percentage points. This is a sizeable effect when compared to the observation that about 40% of the children in the sample completed university education. This effect is found to be robust to alternative specifications that include variables aimed at controlling for differences in maternal occupation and personality traits and differences in paternal education.

KW - marriage

KW - mother

KW - employment

KW - child

KW - education

M3 - Working paper

T3 - Economics Working Papers series

BT - Maternal Employment and Child Outcomes: Evidence from the Irish Marriage Bar

PB - The Department of Economics

CY - Lancaster

ER -