The Her in Inheritance: How Marriage Matching Has Always Mattered, Quebec 1800–1970
利用魁北克1800-1970年的独特数据,研究发现婚姻匹配从19世纪初就高度同质,且取决于女性个人人力资本而非仅家庭背景,母亲对子女的影响独立于父亲,表明婚姻匹配和女性对社会流动性始终重要。
When did marriage become strongly assortative? I use a uniquely suitable database from Quebec 1800–1970 to provide the long-run perspective necessary to answer this question. First, I develop a novel method that reveals that marriage was highly assortative as far back as the early nineteenth century. Next, I show this matching depends on the individual human capital of women, not just on family backgrounds. Finally, I show that mothers had an effect on child outcomes independent of the fathers. Thus, despite deeply conservative gender norms, marriage matching—and women—have always mattered for social mobility.