학술논문

Parental health and child behavior: evidence from parental health shocks
Document Type
Original Paper
Source
Review of Economics of the Household. September 2016 14(3):577-598
Subject
Human capital
Health
Non-cognitive skills
I00
J24
I10
Language
English
ISSN
1569-5239
1573-7152
Abstract
This study examines the importance of parental health in the development of child behavior during early childhood. Our analysis is based on child psychometric measures from a longitudinal German dataset, which tracks mothers and their newborns up to age six. We identify major changes in parental health (shocks) and control for a variety of initial characteristics of the child including prenatal conditions. The results are robust to placebo regressions of health shocks that occur after the outcomes are measured. Our findings point to negative effects of maternal health shocks on children’s emotional symptoms, conduct problems and hyperactivity. We estimate that maternal health shocks worsen outcomes by as much as 0.9 standard deviations. In contrast, paternal health seems to be less relevant to children’s behavioral skills.