Working Paper: CEPR ID: DP11100
Authors: Mevlude Akbulutyuksel; Adriana D. Kugler
Abstract: It is well known that a substantial part of income and education is passed on from parents to children, generating substantial persistence in socio-economic status across generations. In this paper, we examine whether another form of human capital, health, is also largely transmitted from generation to generation, contributing to limited socio-economic mobility. Using data from the NLSY, we first present new evidence on intergenerational transmission of health outcomes in the U.S., including weight, height, the body mass index (BMI), asthma and depression for both natives and immigrants. We show that both native and immigrant children inherit a prominent fraction of their health status from their parents, and that, on average, immigrants experience higher persistence than natives in weight and BMI. We also find that mothers’ education decreases children’s weight and BMI for natives, while single motherhood increases weight and BMI for both native and immigrant children. Finally, we find that the longer immigrants remain in the U.S., the less intergenerational persistence there is and the more immigrants look like native children. Unfortunately, the more generations immigrant families remain in the U.S., the more children of immigrants resemble natives’ higher weights, higher BMI and increased propensity to suffer from asthma.
Keywords: health status; immigrants; intergenerational mobility
JEL Codes: I12; I14; J61; J62
Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.
Cause | Effect |
---|---|
Mothers' health outcomes (I14) | Children's health outcomes (I14) |
Mothers' education (I24) | Children's weight and BMI (Y10) |
Single motherhood (J12) | Children's weight and BMI (Y10) |
Length of time immigrants reside in the U.S. (K37) | Intergenerational persistence in health outcomes (I14) |
Generational status of immigrants (J11) | Health outcome correlations (I14) |