Inequalities in Resources for Preschool-Age Children by Parental Education: Evidence from Six Advanced Industrialized Countries

被引:0
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作者
Jane Waldfogel
Sarah Jiyoon Kwon
Yi Wang
Liz Washbrook
Valentina Perinetti Casoni
Melanie Olczyk
Thorsten Schneider
Lidia Panico
Anne Solaz
Sabine Weinert
Anna Volodina
Sanneke de la Rie
Renske Keizer
Kayo Nozaki
Jun Yamashita
Yuriko Kameyama
Hideo Akabayashi
机构
[1] Columbia University,Centre de Recherche Sur Les Inégalités Sociales (CRIS), CNRS
[2] University of Chicago,Hunter College
[3] University of Bristol,undefined
[4] Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg,undefined
[5] Leipzig University,undefined
[6] Sciences Po,undefined
[7] Institut National d’études Démographiques (INED),undefined
[8] University of Bamberg,undefined
[9] Institute for Educational Quality Improvement at the Humboldt-Universität Zu Berlin,undefined
[10] Erasmus University Rotterdam,undefined
[11] Osaka University of Economics,undefined
[12] Japan Women’s University,undefined
[13] Keio University,undefined
[14] City University of New York,undefined
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关键词
Inequalities; Children; Family income; Center-based child care; Parental education; Comparative research;
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摘要
This paper provides new evidence on inequalities in resources for children age 3–4 by parental education using harmonized data from six advanced industrialized countries—United States, United Kingdom, France, Germany, Netherlands, and Japan—that represent different social welfare regime types. We analyze inequalities in two types of resources for young children—family income, and center-based child care—applying two alternative measures of parental education—highest parental education, and maternal education. We hypothesize that inequalities in resources by parental education will be less pronounced in countries where social policies are designed to be more equalizing. The results provide partial support for this hypothesis: the influence of parental education on resources for children does vary by the social policy context, although not in all cases. We also find that the measurement of parental education matters: income disparities are smaller under a maternal-only definition whereas child care disparities are larger. Moreover, the degree of divergence between the two sets of estimates differs across countries. We provide some of the first systematic evidence about how resources for young children vary depending on parents’ education and the extent to which such inequalities are buffered by social policies. We find that while early inequalities are a fact of life in all six countries, the extent of those inequalities varies considerably. Moreover, the results suggest that social policy plays a role in moderating the influence of parental education on resources for children.
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