1. School starting age, maternal age at birth, and child outcomes
- Author
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Peter Fredriksson, Kristiina Huttunen, Björn Öckert, Uppsala University, Department of Economics, Institute for Evaluation of Labour Market and Education Policy, Aalto-yliopisto, and Aalto University
- Subjects
Schools ,School starting age ,Adolescent ,Economics ,Health Policy ,Infant, Newborn ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Mothers ,Public Health, Global Health, Social Medicine and Epidemiology ,Education ,Folkhälsovetenskap, global hälsa, socialmedicin och epidemiologi ,Fertility ,Birth outcomes ,Birth Weight ,Educational Status ,Humans ,Female ,Crime ,Nationalekonomi ,Child ,Maternal age ,Maternal Age - Abstract
Funding Information: We thank seminar and session participants at UCL, SOFI, SOLE 2017, EALE 2018, ESPE 2019, Barcelona Summer Forum, 2020. Fredriksson gratefully acknowledges the financial support from Marcus and Amalia Wallenberg Foundation and Handelsbanken. Huttunen gratefully acknowledges financial support from the Finnish Academy. Publisher Copyright: © 2022 This paper analyses the effects of maternal age at birth on children's short and long-term outcomes using Finnish register data. We exploit a school starting age rule for identification. Mothers who are born after the school entry cut-off give birth at higher age, but total fertility and earnings are unaffected. Being born after the cut-off reduces gestation and, hence, child birth weight. The effects on birth weight and gestation are rather small, however, suggesting that the long-run impacts may be limited. Accordingly, we find no impacts on longer-term child outcomes, such as educational attainment and adolescent crime rates. Thus, using this source of variation, we find no favorable average effects of maternal age at birth on child outcomes.
- Published
- 2022