Type | Working Paper |
Title | Why Wait? A Century of Education, Marriage Timing and Gender Roles |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2016 |
URL | https://www.econstor.eu/bitstream/10419/130354/1/dp9671.pdf |
Abstract | How much of social mobility and income inequality is due to initial opportunities relative to adult income risk? Previous studies have yielded very wide estimates due to data limitations. To provide a more precise answer this article builds on a standard heterogeneous agent life cycle model with idiosyncratic income shocks. We propose that fertility differentials between rich and poor households can lead to substantial differences in the resources available for children, which can be important for their adult outcomes. Accounting for this is essential for the proper evaluation of initial opportunities, so we extend the model to introduce the role of families through endogenous fertility, family transfers and education. We find that initial conditions as of age 13 account for more of adult income inequality than do labor income shocks. Moreover, fertility differentials and family transfers are found to account for over 50% of the social mobility in the data. |