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The Impact of Parental Income and Education on the Schooling of their Children

Research output: Working paper

Published

Standard

The Impact of Parental Income and Education on the Schooling of their Children. / Chevalier, A; Harmon, C; O'Sullivan, V et al.
Lancaster University: The Department of Economics, 2010. (Economics Working Paper Series).

Research output: Working paper

Harvard

Chevalier, A, Harmon, C, O'Sullivan, V & Walker, I 2010 'The Impact of Parental Income and Education on the Schooling of their Children' Economics Working Paper Series, The Department of Economics, Lancaster University.

APA

Chevalier, A., Harmon, C., O'Sullivan, V., & Walker, I. (2010). The Impact of Parental Income and Education on the Schooling of their Children. (Economics Working Paper Series). The Department of Economics.

Vancouver

Chevalier A, Harmon C, O'Sullivan V, Walker I. The Impact of Parental Income and Education on the Schooling of their Children. Lancaster University: The Department of Economics. 2010. (Economics Working Paper Series).

Author

Chevalier, A ; Harmon, C ; O'Sullivan, V et al. / The Impact of Parental Income and Education on the Schooling of their Children. Lancaster University : The Department of Economics, 2010. (Economics Working Paper Series).

Bibtex

@techreport{c8a04f172ed541ecb5bf48c871290eab,
title = "The Impact of Parental Income and Education on the Schooling of their Children",
abstract = "This paper addresses the intergenerational transmission of education and investigates the extent to which early school leaving (at age 16) may be due to variations in parental background. An important contribution of the paper is to distinguish between the causal effects of parental income and parental education levels. Least squares estimation reveals conventional results - weak effects of income (when the child is 16), stronger effects of maternal education than paternal, and stronger effects on sons than daughters. We find that the education effects remain significant even when household income is included. However, when we use instrumental variable methods to simultaneously account for the endogeneity of parental education and paternal income, only maternal education remains significant (for daughters only) and becomes stronger. These estimates are consistent to various set of instruments. The impact of paternal income varies between specifications but become insignificant in our preferred specification. Our results provide limited evidence that policies alleviating income constraints at age 16 can alter schooling decisions but that policies increasing permanent income would lead to increased participation (especially for daughters). There is also evidence of intergenerational transmissions of education choice from mothers to daughters.",
keywords = "Early school leaving, intergenerational transmission",
author = "A Chevalier and C Harmon and V O'Sullivan and I Walker",
year = "2010",
language = "English",
series = "Economics Working Paper Series",
publisher = "The Department of Economics",
type = "WorkingPaper",
institution = "The Department of Economics",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - The Impact of Parental Income and Education on the Schooling of their Children

AU - Chevalier, A

AU - Harmon, C

AU - O'Sullivan, V

AU - Walker, I

PY - 2010

Y1 - 2010

N2 - This paper addresses the intergenerational transmission of education and investigates the extent to which early school leaving (at age 16) may be due to variations in parental background. An important contribution of the paper is to distinguish between the causal effects of parental income and parental education levels. Least squares estimation reveals conventional results - weak effects of income (when the child is 16), stronger effects of maternal education than paternal, and stronger effects on sons than daughters. We find that the education effects remain significant even when household income is included. However, when we use instrumental variable methods to simultaneously account for the endogeneity of parental education and paternal income, only maternal education remains significant (for daughters only) and becomes stronger. These estimates are consistent to various set of instruments. The impact of paternal income varies between specifications but become insignificant in our preferred specification. Our results provide limited evidence that policies alleviating income constraints at age 16 can alter schooling decisions but that policies increasing permanent income would lead to increased participation (especially for daughters). There is also evidence of intergenerational transmissions of education choice from mothers to daughters.

AB - This paper addresses the intergenerational transmission of education and investigates the extent to which early school leaving (at age 16) may be due to variations in parental background. An important contribution of the paper is to distinguish between the causal effects of parental income and parental education levels. Least squares estimation reveals conventional results - weak effects of income (when the child is 16), stronger effects of maternal education than paternal, and stronger effects on sons than daughters. We find that the education effects remain significant even when household income is included. However, when we use instrumental variable methods to simultaneously account for the endogeneity of parental education and paternal income, only maternal education remains significant (for daughters only) and becomes stronger. These estimates are consistent to various set of instruments. The impact of paternal income varies between specifications but become insignificant in our preferred specification. Our results provide limited evidence that policies alleviating income constraints at age 16 can alter schooling decisions but that policies increasing permanent income would lead to increased participation (especially for daughters). There is also evidence of intergenerational transmissions of education choice from mothers to daughters.

KW - Early school leaving

KW - intergenerational transmission

M3 - Working paper

T3 - Economics Working Paper Series

BT - The Impact of Parental Income and Education on the Schooling of their Children

PB - The Department of Economics

CY - Lancaster University

ER -