Working Paper: NBER ID: w29509
Authors: Robert Kaestner; Ofer Malamud
Abstract: The authors use data from the Children of the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth (C-NLSY79) to examine gender differences in the associations between child behavioral problems and early adult earnings. They find large and significant earnings penalties for women who exhibited more headstrong behavior and for men who exhibited more dependent behavior as children. In contrast, there are no penalties for men who were headstrong or for women who were dependent. While other child behavioral problems are also associated with labor market earnings, their associations are not significantly different by gender. The gender differences in headstrong and dependent behavior are not explained by education, marriage, depression, self-esteem, health, or adult personality traits. However, one potential explanation is that these gender differences are a consequence of deviations from gender norms and stereotypes in the workplace.
Keywords: Child behavior; Labor market returns; Gender differences; Earnings; Noncognitive skills
JEL Codes: J16; J24
Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.
Cause | Effect |
---|---|
childhood behavioral problems (D91) | adult earnings (J31) |
dependent behavior (men) (D91) | adult earnings (J31) |
dependent behavior (women) (J16) | adult earnings (J31) |
headstrong behavior (women) (B54) | adult earnings (J31) |
headstrong behavior (men) (D91) | adult earnings (J31) |