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Petter Lundborg. Photo.

Petter Lundborg

Professor

Petter Lundborg. Photo.

The effect of a sibling's gender on earnings and family formation

Author

  • Noemi Peter
  • Petter Lundborg
  • Sara Mikkelsen
  • Dinand Webbink

Summary, in English

We examine how the gender of a sibling affects labor market outcomes and family formation. Identification is complicated by parental preferences: if parents prefer certain sex compositions over others, children’ s gender affects not only the outcomes of other children but also the existence of potential additional children. We employ two empirical strategies that both address this problem. First, we use a large sample of singletons to estimate whether first-borns are affected by the gender of their second-born sibling. Second, we look at a sample of dizygotic (i.e. non-identical) twins. We find that a same-sex sibling increases men's earnings and family formation outcomes (marriage and fertility), as compared to an opposite-sex sibling. The results for women are similar but the effects are smaller in magnitude and less robust. We argue that the income result for men could be driven by competition between brothers, as we find that men with brothers choose higher paying occupations. For women, we find suggestive evidence that the income premium may come partly from lower unemployment, which could be due to shared job search networks. The effects on family formation might stem from differential parental treatment for men, and from competition between sisters for women.

Department/s

  • Department of Economics

Publishing year

2018-10-01

Language

English

Pages

61-78

Publication/Series

Labour Economics

Volume

54

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Elsevier

Topic

  • Economics
  • Gender Studies
  • Sociology (excluding Social Work, Social Psychology and Social Anthropology)

Keywords

  • Fertility
  • Income
  • Sex composition
  • Sibling gender
  • Twins

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 0927-5371