Search Results

Title: The Effect of Child Gender on Parents' Labor Supply: An Examination of Natives, Immigrants, and their Children
Resulting in 1 citation.
1. Pabilonia, Sabrina Wulff
Ward-Batts, Jennifer
The Effect of Child Gender on Parents' Labor Supply: An Examination of Natives, Immigrants, and their Children
Presented: New York, NY, Society of Labor Economists Annual Meeting, May 2008.
Also: http://client.norc.org/jole/SOLEweb/806P.pdf
Cohort(s): NLSY79
Publisher: National Opinion Research Center - NORC
Keyword(s): Census of Population; Children; Current Population Survey (CPS) / CPS-Fertility Supplement; Gender; Immigrants; Labor Supply; Marital Stability; Panel Study of Income Dynamics (PSID); Parents, Behavior

Research has shown that child gender affects household behavior in both developing and developed countries. Child gender affects many aspects of parents' behavior, including labor supply, marital stability, and time spent with children. Research using PSID and NLS data has found conflicting results on the direction, but in both cases, that child gender affects parents' labor supply. We explore whether parents' apparent bias may be attributable to culture, which changes slowly but may have developed in response to economic incentives, such as a higher return on investment in sons, or old age support provided by a son. We use data from the CPS, PSID, and NLS to examine U.S. parents with a young child to determine whether having a son rather than a daughter has a significant effect on parents' labor supply and whether the culture of immigrants or racial/ethnic subgroups results in different effects of child gender across groups.
Bibliography Citation
Pabilonia, Sabrina Wulff and Jennifer Ward-Batts. "The Effect of Child Gender on Parents' Labor Supply: An Examination of Natives, Immigrants, and their Children." Presented: New York, NY, Society of Labor Economists Annual Meeting, May 2008.