Causal Effects of Paternity Leave on Children and Parents

40 Pages Posted: 18 Jul 2011

See all articles by Sara Cools

Sara Cools

BI Norwegian Business School

Jon H. Fiva

BI Norwegian Business School

Lars J. Kirkebøen

Statistics Norway - Research Department

Date Written: July 18, 2011

Abstract

In this paper we use a parental leave reform directed towards fathers to identify the causal effects of paternity leave on children’s and parents’ outcomes. We document that paternity leave causes fathers to become more important for children’s cognitive skills. School performance at age 16 increases for children whose father is relatively higher educated than the mother. We find no evidence that fathers’ earnings and work hours are affected by paternity leave. Contrary to expectation, mothers’ labor market outcomes are adversely affected by paternity leave. Our findings do therefore not suggest that paternity leave shifts the gender balance at home in a way that increases mothers’ time and/or effort spent at market work.

Keywords: parental leave, labor supply, child development

JEL Classification: J130, J220, J240, I210

Suggested Citation

Cools, Sara and Fiva, Jon H. and Kirkebøen, Lars J., Causal Effects of Paternity Leave on Children and Parents (July 18, 2011). CESifo Working Paper Series No. 3513, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1888169 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.1888169

Sara Cools

BI Norwegian Business School ( email )

Jon H. Fiva (Contact Author)

BI Norwegian Business School ( email )

Nydalsveien 37
Oslo, 0442
Norway

Lars J. Kirkebøen

Statistics Norway - Research Department ( email )

Kongens Gt. 6
PO Box 8131 Dep
N-0033 Oslo
Norway

Do you have negative results from your research you’d like to share?

Paper statistics

Downloads
612
Abstract Views
2,677
Rank
81,481
PlumX Metrics