父母失业对孩子成长的影响

Jenifer Ruiz-Valenzuela
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引用次数: 4

摘要

严重的经济衰退通常以高失业率为特征。现有证据表明,失业者遭受的短期收入损失会长期持续下去,更有可能失业,对健康造成负面影响,离婚的可能性也会增加。因此,失业有可能对包括儿童在内的其他家庭成员产生溢出效应。这是因为失业的大多数负面后果对进入认知成就生产函数和健康生产函数的变量都有直接影响。失去工作的工人可能与那些仍有工作的人有一些研究者没有注意到的不同之处,而这可能反过来影响孩子的成长。忽略变量偏差对获得父母失业的因果估计提出了挑战。文献试图接近理想实验的方式主要取决于所分析的孩子的结果是否可以在冲击之前和之后观察到(即,父母失业之前和之后),通常依赖于工厂关闭或裁员和/或个人固定效应造成的失业。一项文献调查显示,父亲的失业似乎对衡量孩子健康和学业表现的结果产生了不利影响。母亲失业对这些结果的影响是混合的(包括负面、零影响和积极影响)。对更长期结果的影响还不太清楚,当涉及到父母失业对大学入学率的影响时,结果非常复杂,对收入的影响很小。然而,在许多研究中,平均效应掩盖了亚群体之间的重要差异:父母失业的负面影响似乎主要集中在处境不利的家庭。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Effects of Parental Job Loss on Children’s Outcomes
Severe economic downturns are typically characterized by a high incidence of job losses. The available evidence suggests that job losers suffer short-run earning losses that persist in the long run, are more likely to remain unemployed, suffer negative health impacts, and experience an increased likelihood of divorce. Job losses have therefore the potential to generate spillover effects for other members of the household, including children. This comes about because most of the negative consequences of job loss have a direct effect on variables that enter both the production function of cognitive achievement and the health production function. Workers who lose their jobs are likely different from those who remain employed in ways that are unobserved to the researcher and that might, in turn, affect child outcomes. Omitted variable bias poses a challenge to obtaining causal estimates of parental job loss. The way the literature has tried to approximate the ideal experiment has mainly depended on whether the child outcome under analysis could be observed both before and after the shock (i.e., both before and after parental job loss), normally relying on job losses coming from plant closures or downsizes and/or individual fixed effects. A survey of the literature shows that father’s job losses seem to have a detrimental impact on outcomes measuring children’s health and school performance. The impact of mother’s job losses on these same outcomes is mixed (including negative, null, and positive impacts). The impact on more long-term outcomes is less clear, with very mixed findings when it comes to the effect of parental job loss on college enrollment, and small impacts on earnings. In many studies, though, average effects mask important differences across subgroups: the negative impact of parental job loss seems to be mostly concentrated on disadvantaged households.
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