议价能力
人力资本
社会流动性
经济
投资(军事)
劳动经济学
人口经济学
英国家庭小组调查
悲观
授权
面板数据
心理学
社会学
微观经济学
经济增长
计量经济学
政治
认识论
哲学
社会科学
法学
政治学
作者
Elizabeth Asiedu,Théophile T. Azomahou,Yoseph Getachew,Eleni Yitbarek
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.jebo.2021.09.039
摘要
This study provides empirical evidence and develops a model that captures the complex intra-household bargaining interactions and gender-based intergenerational occupational mobility. Using panel data from Nigeria, our estimates show that greater intra-household female bargaining power leads to greater intergenerational occupational mobility for sons more than daughters. Similarly, the median age at first marriage has a positive impact on occupational mobility for both daughters and sons. However, benefit is larger for sons. In the model, parental gender bias is modeled as non-pecuniary (psychic) cost – a representation of parents' pessimistic attitude towards their children's adulthood outcomes – which negatively affects the marginal benefit of investing in children's human capital. The decision of parents is critical in determining children's mobility and becomes the basis of gender-based differences in human capital investment and intergenerational persistence.
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