Parents’ health and adult children’s subsequent working status: A perspective of intergenerational transfer and time allocation

Type Journal Article - Journal of Family and Economic Issues
Title Parents’ health and adult children’s subsequent working status: A perspective of intergenerational transfer and time allocation
Author(s)
Volume 32
Issue 3
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2011
Page numbers 493-507
URL https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10834-010-9240-1?LI=true
Abstract
This paper frames how parents’ health problems may affect a child’s subsequent working status. Parental health problems occurring in their prime working years undermine an adult child’s resources and tend to affect the child’s preferences over time-allocations among leisure, market- and non-market-labor. Empirical applications in this paper focus on a situation with pervasive health problems, lack of social safety network, and a substantial gender gap in labor market return. Exploiting Russia Longitudinal Monitoring Survey (RLMS) for the period 1994–2004, empirical results indicate that a father’s poor health status is a significant predictor of lowering a daughter’s educational attainment and working probability during her subsequent, adulthood years.

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