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Materfamilias: The beneficial impact of mother’s work on children economic mobility

Brea Martinez, Gabriel LU (2021) 2021 ISA RC28 Spring Meeting
Abstract
The intergenerational influence on social and economic mobility always attracted the interest of
researchers, bringing evidences on that intergenerational mobility correlate positively with the
generation of opportunities and low levels of inequality at the society level. Recent studies pointed
an exclusive focus on the influence of fathers on child’s outcomes, which neglecting the maternal
influence. Nevertheless, studies developing a higher attention to mother’s influence on
intergenerational mobility usually focus only in periods after 1970. The main arguments for not
extending back studies on maternal influence lie on a common belief that mothers would have a
small impact on male breadwinner societies, when... (More)
The intergenerational influence on social and economic mobility always attracted the interest of
researchers, bringing evidences on that intergenerational mobility correlate positively with the
generation of opportunities and low levels of inequality at the society level. Recent studies pointed
an exclusive focus on the influence of fathers on child’s outcomes, which neglecting the maternal
influence. Nevertheless, studies developing a higher attention to mother’s influence on
intergenerational mobility usually focus only in periods after 1970. The main arguments for not
extending back studies on maternal influence lie on a common belief that mothers would have a
small impact on male breadwinner societies, when it was uncommon for mothers with schoolaged children to work.
This paper studies the maternal influence on child’s social mobility in a period when mother’s
gainfully work was far from being common. I look for a potential beneficial effect of forerunner
mothers, working after motherhood between the end of 1940’s and 1980’s. I use rich
longitudinal data from Southern Sweden with enough income and sociodemographic information
that allows studying intergenerational income mobility in a consistent way.
My findings show that mother’s income did not influence children directly. However, maternal
working status and income similarity to fathers, a proxy to economic autonomy, during late
childhood and adolescence had a substantial effect on upward economic mobility, especially for
daughters. These results suggest that apart from the direct income influence, an active role
model could be fundamental to promote social mobility and to narrow gender disparities. (Less)
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author
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to conference
publication status
published
subject
conference name
2021 ISA RC28 Spring Meeting
conference location
Turku, Finland
conference dates
2021-06-01 - 2021-06-04
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
cb8a76df-d080-457c-976f-b8063bf67b2a
date added to LUP
2021-02-05 11:12:53
date last changed
2024-06-25 16:13:30
@misc{cb8a76df-d080-457c-976f-b8063bf67b2a,
  abstract     = {{The intergenerational influence on social and economic mobility always attracted the interest of<br/>researchers, bringing evidences on that intergenerational mobility correlate positively with the<br/>generation of opportunities and low levels of inequality at the society level. Recent studies pointed<br/>an exclusive focus on the influence of fathers on child’s outcomes, which neglecting the maternal<br/>influence. Nevertheless, studies developing a higher attention to mother’s influence on<br/>intergenerational mobility usually focus only in periods after 1970. The main arguments for not<br/>extending back studies on maternal influence lie on a common belief that mothers would have a<br/>small impact on male breadwinner societies, when it was uncommon for mothers with schoolaged children to work.<br/>This paper studies the maternal influence on child’s social mobility in a period when mother’s<br/>gainfully work was far from being common. I look for a potential beneficial effect of forerunner<br/>mothers, working after motherhood between the end of 1940’s and 1980’s. I use rich<br/>longitudinal data from Southern Sweden with enough income and sociodemographic information<br/>that allows studying intergenerational income mobility in a consistent way.<br/>My findings show that mother’s income did not influence children directly. However, maternal<br/>working status and income similarity to fathers, a proxy to economic autonomy, during late<br/>childhood and adolescence had a substantial effect on upward economic mobility, especially for<br/>daughters. These results suggest that apart from the direct income influence, an active role<br/>model could be fundamental to promote social mobility and to narrow gender disparities.}},
  author       = {{Brea Martinez, Gabriel}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  title        = {{Materfamilias: The beneficial impact of mother’s work on children economic mobility}},
  year         = {{2021}},
}