Youth Emancipation and Perceived Job Insecurity of Parents and Children

Working Paper: CEPR ID: DP5338

Authors: Sascha O. Becker; Samuel Bentolila; Ana Fernandes; Andrea Ichino

Abstract: The age at which children leave the parental home differs considerably across countries. In this paper we argue that lower job insecurity of parents and higher job insecurity of children delay emancipation. We provide aggregate evidence which supports this hypothesis for 12 European countries and which helps account for the increase in coresidence in the 1990s. We also give microeconometric evidence for Italy, a country for which we have access to household-specific information on job security of fathers and coresidence. In the late 1990s, approximately 75% of young Italians aged 18 to 35 were living at home and they had only a 4% probability of emancipation in the 3 subsequent years. We show that this probability would have increased by 4 to 10 percentage points if their fathers had gone from perceiving to have a fully secure job to expecting to be unemployed for sure.

Keywords: emancipation; job security; option value

JEL Codes: J1; J2


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.


Causal Claims

CauseEffect
lower job insecurity among parents (J63)coresidence rates (R21)
higher job insecurity among children (J62)coresidence rates (R21)
paternal job insecurity (J63)probability of child leaving home (J12)

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