Divorce, parental conflicts and child skills: A story of selection
利用英国千禧队列研究数据,研究父母在儿童早期离婚如何影响儿童技能发展,发现技能差距几乎完全源于离婚前家庭特征的选择效应,父母冲突是重要因素。
This paper uses data from the UK Millennium Cohort Study (MCS) to study how parental divorce in early childhood affects a child’s skill development. We estimate a dynamic model of child skill formation that accounts for the endogenous nature of parental divorce including a measure of interparental conflicts. Our results show that the skill disadvantages among children of divorce stem almost entirely from the effects of selection. Here, skill gaps materialise due to disadvantages in household characteristics that also increase divorce risk. Inter-parental conflicts, parental education, and family financial resources emerge as key pre-divorce characteristics that explain divorce gaps in children’s cognitive and socio-emotional skills from age 3, through age 11. Inter-parental conflicts are often unobserved and overlooked in the literature, but our results demonstrate that they indeed play a major role, particularly for gaps in socio-emotional skills. Moreover, such gaps are found to be more pronounced among more vulnerable children, i.e. those with lower levels of socio-emotional skills. • This paper uses UK MCS data to study how early parental divorce affects child skills. • Our model of skill formation addresses divorce endogeneity and includes parental conflict. • Skill gaps mainly arise from pre-divorce household disadvantages tied to separation. • Parental conflict significantly widens socio-emotional gaps among vulnerable children.