Date: 2016
Type: Article
Understanding heterogeneity in the effects of parental separation on educational attainment in Britain : do children from lower educational backgrounds have less to lose?
European sociological review. 2016, Vol. 32, No. 6, pp. 807-819
BERNARDI, Fabrizio, BOERTIEN, Diederik, Understanding heterogeneity in the effects of parental separation on educational attainment in Britain : do children from lower educational backgrounds have less to lose?, European sociological review. 2016, Vol. 32, No. 6, pp. 807-819
- https://hdl.handle.net/1814/61448
Retrieved from Cadmus, EUI Research Repository
We use the British Cohort Study 1970 to show that the proportion of children achieving a tertiary education degree is 8 percentage points lower for the offspring of separated parents than for children from intact families. Moreover, the children of highly educated parents experience a two times larger 'separation penalty' than the children of less educated parents. We find a similar pattern of heterogeneity in effects for the likelihood of participation in academic education (A-Levels) beyond school leaving age but not for school grades at age 16. We test three different explanations for heterogeneity in the parental separation penalty: changes in family relations, changes in income, and negative selection into separation based on unobserved characteristics. We address the potential endogeneity of parental separation by including pre-separation observable characteristics, individual fixed effects models, and a placebo test. Our key finding is that changes in family income, but not those in family relations or selection, explain a large part of heterogeneity in the effects of parental separation. Children with more highly educated parents face a larger decline in family income if parents separate and, in addition, declines in family income of equal amounts entail more negative consequences for their educational attainment.
Additional information:
Published: 31 July 2016
Cadmus permanent link: https://hdl.handle.net/1814/61448
Full-text via DOI: 10.1093/esr/jcw036
ISSN: 0266-7215; 1468-2672
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Keyword(s): Family structure Class differentials Divorce Inequality Marriage Mothers Fathers Instability Regression Advantage
Grant number: FP7/320116/EU
Sponsorship and Funder information:
This work was supported by funding from the European Union's Seventh Framework Programme for the research project Families and Societies (FP7/2007-2013 grant agreement no. 320116).
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