认知技能和家庭内部教育分配:父母是加强还是纠正兄弟姐妹之间的认知差异?

IF 1.3 4区 经济学 Q3 DEMOGRAPHY
J. García-Hombrados, E. Masset
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本研究利用加纳北部的家庭数据,考察了认知技能如何影响家庭子女的学业分配。分析显示,与家庭中其他兄弟姐妹相比,认知测试得分增加一个标准差,在接下来的四年里,受教育的年限增加了0.123–0.237,具体取决于所使用的认知测试。这些结果与开创性论文Becker(1981)中提出的家庭内部资源分配理论模型的主要预测一致:父母通过将更多的人力资本资源分配给更有能力的兄弟姐妹,强化了兄弟姐妹之间的认知差异。我们发现,男孩比女孩受到的影响更大,而贫穷和不太贫穷的家庭之间的影响没有显著差异。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Cognitive skills and intra-household allocation of schooling: do parents reinforce or correct for cognitive differences between siblings?
Using household data from Northern Ghana, this study examines how cognitive skills affect the allocation of schooling across the children of a household. The analysis reveals that relative to the rest of the siblings in the household, an increase of one standard deviation in the score of cognitive tests increases by 0.123–0.237 the number of years of schooling attended in the following four years, depending on the cognitive test used. These results are consistent with the main prediction of the theoretical model for intra-household allocation of resources developed in the seminal paper Becker (1981): parents reinforce cognitive differences between siblings through allocating more human capital resources to the more able siblings. We find larger effects for boys than for girls while they do not differ significantly among poorer and less poorer households.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
26
期刊介绍: Demographic variables such as fertility, mortality, migration and family structures notably respond to economic incentives and in turn affect the economic development of societies. Journal of Demographic Economics welcomes both empirical and theoretical papers on issues relevant to Demographic Economics with a preference for combining abstract economic or demographic models together with data to highlight major mechanisms. The journal was first published in 1929 as Bulletin de l’Institut des Sciences Economiques. It later became known as Louvain Economic Review, and continued till 2014 to publish under this title. In 2015, it moved to Cambridge University Press, increased its international character and changed its focus exclusively to demographic economics.
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