Identifying the Effect of Parenthood on Labor Force Participation: A Gender Comparison
Seyyed Ali Zeytoon Nejad Moosavian

TL;DR
This study examines how parenthood influences labor force participation, revealing that motherhood decreases and fatherhood increases LFP, with effects diminishing over time, using fixed-effects models on longitudinal survey data.
Contribution
It provides a gender-disaggregated causal analysis of parenthood's impact on labor participation using individual fixed-effects and binary response models.
Findings
Parenthood negatively affects overall labor force participation.
Paternity increases the likelihood of being in the labor force.
The impact of parenthood on LFP has decreased over time.
Abstract
Identifying the factors that influence labor force participation could elucidate how individuals arrive at their labor supply decisions, whose understanding is, in turn, of crucial importance in analyzing how the supply side of the labor market functions. This paper investigates the effect of parenthood status on Labor Force Participation (LFP) decisions using an individual-level fixed-effects identification strategy. The differences across individuals and over time in having or not having children as well as being or not being in the labor force provide the variation needed to assess the association between individuals' LFP behavior and parenthood. Parenthood could have different impacts on mothers than it would on fathers. In order to look at the causal effect of maternity and paternity on LFP separately, the data is disaggregated by gender. To this end, the effect of a change in the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGender, Labor, and Family Dynamics · Labor market dynamics and wage inequality · Work-Family Balance Challenges
