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Petter Lundborg. Photo.

Petter Lundborg

Professor

Petter Lundborg. Photo.

The Intergenerational Transmission of Schooling: Are Mothers Really Less Important than Fathers?

Author

  • Petter Lundborg
  • Dan-Olof Rooth
  • Vikesh Amin

Summary, in English

There is a “puzzle” in the literature on the intergenerational transmission of schooling, where twin studies emphasize the importance of fathers’ schooling, whereas IV-studies often emphasize the importance of mothers. We provide new evidence on this “puzzle” using register based Swedish data on the largest sample of twins used so far in the literature. In contrast to previous twin studies, our results confirm the importance of mothers’ schooling. We also provide the first twin-based evidence of possible role model effects, where our estimates suggest that mother's schooling matters more than father's schooling for daughters schooling. One additional year of mothers’ schooling raises daughter's schooling by a tenth of a year, which is similar to some of the previous IV-based estimates in the literature. Finally, we bring in new US twin data that for the first time allows a replication of previous twin-based estimates of the intergenerational transmission of schooling in the US. The results show no statistically significant effect of mothers’ and fathers’ schooling on children's schooling. Our results have implications for assessing the efficiency of policies that subsidize the schooling of men and women and are in contrast to most previous findings in the twin literature.

Department/s

  • Centre for Economic Demography
  • Department of Economics

Publishing year

2015

Language

English

Pages

100-117

Publication/Series

Economics of Education Review

Volume

47

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Elsevier

Topic

  • Economics and Business

Keywords

  • Twins
  • Intergenerational mobility
  • Education
  • Schooling
  • Twin-fixed effects

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1873-7382