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Parenthood and the earnings of married men and women

[PDF] from umm.ac.id
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S Lundberg… - Labour Economics, 2000 - Elsevier
We use longitudinal data to examine the relationship between parenthood, wages, and
hours worked for married men and women. We find evidence of negative selection into
parenthood, substantial child-related reallocations of time within the household, and ...
Cited by 220 - Related articles - Library Search - All 14 versions

Consumption smoothing and excess female mortality in rural India

Full text - MIT Libraries
E Rose - Review of Economics and Statistics, 1999 - MIT Press
This paper examines the relationship between consumption smoothing and excess female
mortality, by asking if favorable rainfall shocks in childhood increase the survival
probabilities of girls to a greater extent than they increase boys' survival probabilities for a ...
Cited by 209 - Related articles - Library Search - All 11 versions

The effects of sons and daughters on men's labor supply and wages

[PDF] from iastate.edu
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S Lundberg… - Review of Economics and Statistics, 2002 - MIT Press
In this paper, we estimate the effects of children and the differential effects of sons and
daughters on men's labor supply and hourly wage rates. The responses to fatherhood of two
cohorts of men from the PSID sample are examined separately, and we use fixed-effects ...
Cited by 186 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 32 versions

Ex ante and ex post labor supply response to risk in a low-income area

Full text - MIT Libraries
E Rose - Journal of Development Economics, 2001 - Elsevier
This paper tests for ex ante and ex post labor supply responses to weather risk for rural
Indian farm households. The analysis uses panel data on 2115 households spanning 13
states in rural India, merged with a 22-year series of district-level rainfall data. Ex ante, ...
Cited by 98 - Related articles - All 10 versions

Child gender and the transition to marriage

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S Lundberg… - Demography, 2003 - Springer
Abstract We estimate the effect of a child's gender on the mother's probability of marriage or
remarriage using data from the PSID Marital History and Childbirth and Adoption History
Files. We find that the birth of a son speeds the transition into marriage when the child is ...
Cited by 99 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 10 versions

Child gender and father involvement in fragile families

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S Lundberg, S McLanahan… - Demography, 2007 - Springer
Abstract In this article, we use data from the first two waves of the Fragile Families and Child
Wellbeing Study to examine the effects of child gender on father involvement and to
determine if gender effects differ by parents' marital status. We examine several indicators ...
Cited by 61 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 10 versions

Gender bias, credit constraints and time allocation in rural India

[PDF] from microfinancegateway.org
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E Rose - The Economic Journal, 2000 - Wiley Online Library
This paper examines the impact of a child's gender on the time allocation of rural Indian
households for the five-year period subsequent to its birth. A theoretical model generates
predictions for the effect of the birth of a boy relative to a girl (ie, the gender shock) on ...
Cited by 54 - Related articles - Library Search - BL Direct - All 16 versions

[BOOK] The determinants of specialization within marriage

[PDF] from washington.edu
S Lundberg, E Rose… - 1999 - econ.washington.edu
Abstract For recent cohorts of American couples, the traditional division of labor between
husbands and wives is strongly associated with the presence of children in the household.
We define measures of specialization and market intensity in household hours worked ...
Cited by 45 - Related articles - View as HTML - Get it from MIT Libraries - Library Search - All 11 versions

Gender and savings in rural India

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A Deolalikar… - Journal of Population Economics, 1998 - Springer
Abstract. In this study we use data from rural India to examine the impact of the birth of a boy
relative to the birth of a girl (ie, the “gender shock”) on the savings, consumption and income
of rural Indian households. We find that the gender shock reduces savings for medium ...
Cited by 34 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 9 versions

[PDF] Investments in sons and daughters: Evidence from the consumer expenditure survey

[PDF] from washington.edu
S Lundberg… - Family Investments in Children: …, 2004 - econ.washington.edu
ABSTRACT We test for differences in parental investment in sons and daughters by
estimating the effect of child gender on household expenditures. Using Consumer
Expenditure Survey data from 1990 to 1998, we find that the expenditures of married- ...
Cited by 24 - Related articles - View as HTML - All 5 versions

[PDF] Marriage and Assortative Mating: How Have the Patterns Changed?

[PDF] from washington.edu
E Rose - University of Washington, unpublished, 2001 - econ.washington.edu
The role of marriage has undergone profound change in recent decades. Divorce and
cohabitation have become commonplace, and age at first marriage has increased for both
men and women. Shifts in marriage patterns would, in general, be expected to be ...
Cited by 22 - Related articles - View as HTML - All 15 versions

[PDF] Education and hypergamy in marriage markets

[PDF] from washington.edu
E Rose - Seattle, WA: University of Washington Department …, 2004 - econ.washington.edu
Abstract One empirical regularity across many societies is “hypergamy”–the tendency for
women to marry up–with respect to social status, education, income, and other
characteristics associated with economic well-being. This paper introduces hypergamy ...
Cited by 18 - Related articles - View as HTML - All 3 versions

[PDF] Education, Hypergamy and the 'Success Gap'

[PDF] from washington.edu
E Rose - Center for Statistics and the Social Sciences …, 2005 - econ.washington.edu
Abstract It is commonly believed that women tend to marry more successful men (ie, that
there is “hypergamy” with respect to success) and that success hampers women's marriage
prospects. Using education as a proxy for success, I test these two hypotheses. The “ ...
Cited by 14 - Related articles - View as HTML - All 13 versions

More Daughters in Child Care? Child Gender and the Use of Nonrelative Child Care Arrangements*

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B Hiedemann, JM Joesch… - Social science quarterly, 2004 - Wiley Online Library
Objectives. This article examines whether families with white mothers make different child
care decisions for sons than for daughters before the children start school. Methods. We
estimate logistic regressions of the use of nonrelative child care for the youngest child in ...
Cited by 12 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 9 versions

[CITATION] Ex Ante and Ex Post: Labor Supply Responses to Risk in a Low-Income Area

E Rose - 1993 - … of Arts and Sciences, University of …
Cited by 7 - Related articles - Library Search

Why are economics students more selfish than the rest?

[PDF] from iza.org
Y Bauman… - 2009 - papers.ssrn.com
Abstract: A substantial body of research suggests that economists are less generous than
other professionals and that economics students are less generous than other students. We
address this question using administrative data on donations to social programs by ...
Cited by 4 - Related articles - All 18 versions

[CITATION] pInvestments in Sons and Daughters: Ev& idence from the Consumer Expenditure Surveyq in: Ariel Kalil and Thomas DeLeire (eds), Family Investments in …

S Lunberg… - 2004 - Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum …
Cited by 4 - Related articles

[CITATION] Ex Ante and Ex Post Labor Supply Response in a Low-Income Area

Full text - MIT Libraries
E Rose - Journal of Development Economics, 1994
Cited by 3 - Related articles

[CITATION] Health in Brazil: Results from the Brazil Living Standards Measurement Survey

E Rose - Seattle, USA: University of Washington, 1998
Cited by 2 - Related articles

[CITATION] Labor-Supply and Ex-Post Consumption Smoothing in a Low-Income Developing Country

E Rose - forthcoming, Journal of Development Economics, 2000
Cited by 2 - Related articles

[PDF] Does Education Really Disadvantage Women in the Marriage Market?

[PDF] from psu.edu
E Rose - 2003 - Citeseer
Abstract The last several decades have seen profound changes in the roles of women in the
labor market and the family, with both the media and academic research emphasizing the
conflict that women face between their roles in the two spheres. One recurring theme is ...
Cited by 2 - Related articles - View as HTML - All 8 versions

[CITATION] Gender Bias

E Rose - Credit Constraints, and Time Allocation in Rural India, …, 1997
Cited by 2 - Related articles

[PDF] Siblings and Soldiers: Family Background and Military Service in the All-Volunteer Era

[PDF] from berkeley.edu
E Rose - 2006 - emlab.berkeley.edu
ABSTRACT Several studies using surveys from the early years of the all-volunteer force
(AVF) find that having more siblings increases the likelihood of serving in the military.
Understanding the reasons for this sibling/soldier relationship illuminates our ...
Cited by 1 - Related articles - View as HTML - All 5 versions

Estimating the Veteran Effect with Endogenous Schooling when Instruments are Potentially Weak

[PDF] from unc.edu
S Chaudhuri… - 2009 - papers.ssrn.com
Abstract: Instrumental variables estimates of the effect of military service on subsequent
civilian earnings either omit schooling or treat it as exogenous. In a more general setting that
also allows for the treatment of schooling as endogenous, we estimate the veteran effect ...
Cited by 1 - Related articles - All 21 versions

Selection or indoctrination: Why do economics students donate less than the rest? 1

Y Bauman… - Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization, 2011 - Elsevier
A substantial body of research suggests that economists are less generous than other
professionals and that economics students are less generous than other students. Following
Frey and Meier (2003), we address this question using administrative data on donations to ...
Cited by 2 - Related articles - Get it from MIT Libraries - All 4 versions

[CITATION] Education and Hypergamy in Marriage Markets Department of Economics

E Rose - 2004 - Paper
Cited by 1 - Related articles

Evidence from the Consumer Expenditure Survey

E Rose - Family investments in children's potential: resources …, 2004 - books.google.com
Child gender has important and wide-ranging effects on parental behavior and family
outcomes in the United States. Recent research finds that both marital and nonmarital
relationships with sons are more stable than those with daughters (Katzev, Warner, & ...
Related articles - All 2 versions

[PDF] A Joint Econometric Model of Marriage and Partner Choice

[PDF] from washington.edu
E Rose - Working Papers, 2006 - csss.washington.edu
Abstract This paper develops a joint model of the marriage and partner choice decisions.
Each individual chooses his (or her) own optimal feasible partner type, based on preference
and endowments, and the marriage market. He marries when utility when married to the ...
Related articles - View as HTML - Get it from MIT Libraries - All 12 versions

Why are Economics Students More Selfish than the Rest?

E Rose - 2009 - papers.ssrn.com
Abstract: A substantial body of research suggests that economists are less generous than
other professionals and that economics students are less generous than other students. We
address this question using administrative data on donations to social programs by ...
All 4 versions

[BOOK] Are Boys and Girls Treated Differently?: Parental Choice of Child Care Arrangements for Preschoolers in the US

[PDF] from washington.edu
JM Joesch, BG Hiedemann… - 1998 - csde.washington.edu
ABSTRACT In this paper we explore whether parents use different child care arrangements
for boys and girls during the preschool years. Specifically, we address whether the use of
any nonrelative child care varies with the child's sex, and whether sex differences in the ...
Related articles - View as HTML - Get it from MIT Libraries - Library Search - All 8 versions

[PDF] Center for Studies in Demography and Ecology

[PDF] from washington.edu
S Lundberg… - 1999 - csde.washington.edu
ABSTRACT In this paper we estimate the effects of children and the differential effects of
sons and daughters on men's labor supply and hourly wage rates. The responses to
fatherhood of two cohorts of men from the PSID sample–men born in and before 1950 and ...
Related articles - View as HTML - All 2 versions

[PDF] Family Background and Military Service in the All-Volunteer Era

[PDF] from washington.edu
E Rose - 2006 - csde.washington.edu
ABSTRACT Both the military and the family have evolved since 1973, the year of the
inception of the all-volunteer force (AVF). This paper examines how the family shapes the
decision to enlist. The results have implications for how demographics and recruitment ...
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[PDF] A Joint Model of Marriage and Partner Choice

[PDF] from washington.edu
E Rose - 2006 - econ.washington.edu
Abstract This paper models the effect of own and parents' education, and race on the
decision to marry and the education of a partner, conditional on marriage. In the theoretical
model, individuals choose their optimal feasible spouse type in the marriage market, and ...
Related articles - View as HTML - All 4 versions

[PDF] Center for Studies in Demography and Ecology

[PDF] from washington.edu
E Rose - 2004 - csde.washington.edu
Abstract One empirical regularity across many societies is “hypergamy”–the tendency for
women to marry up–with respect to social status, education, income, and other
characteristics associated with economic well-being. This paper introduces hypergamy ...
Related articles - View as HTML - All 2 versions

[CITATION] Investments in Sons and Daughters: Evidence from the Consumer Expenditures Survey

E Rose - Working Papers - ideas.repec.org
No abstract is available for this item. ... To our knowledge, this item is not available for
download. To find whether it is available, there are three options: 1. Check below under "Related
research" whether another version of this item is available online. 2. Check on the ...
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[CITATION] Proposal to Suppport an Art Gallery at Napa State Hospital

ER Cameron - 1987

[PDF] Your Momma Was Home and You Left?: Parental Influence on Military Service

[PDF] from washington.edu
E Rose - Working Papers, 2007 - econ.washington.edu
ABSTRACT This paper describes the relationship between a youth's residence at age
sixteen and the likelihood he eventually enlists in the military. Data from the NLSY97 show
that white youths raised in two parent families are less likely to enlist than those raised in ...
Related articles - View as HTML - Get it from MIT Libraries - All 6 versions

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