Demographic pathways and intergenerational effects of changes in women's education: Evidence from China

被引:0
|
作者
Han, Xiaowen [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Minnesota Twin Cities, Dept Sociol, Minneapolis, MN USA
[2] 267 19th Ave S, Minneapolis, MN 55455 USA
关键词
Intergenerational effects; fertility; marriage; educational inequality; China; policy change; rural/urban; HOUSEHOLD REGISTRATION SYSTEM; SOCIAL-MOBILITY; FERTILITY DECLINE; COLLEGE; STRATIFICATION; ATTAINMENT; INEQUALITY; CONSEQUENCES; EXPANSION; MARRIAGE;
D O I
10.1177/2057150X241246125
中图分类号
C91 [社会学];
学科分类号
030301 ; 1204 ;
摘要
Using data from the 2011 baseline China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study, this study employs a simulation model developed by Mare and Maralani to investigate the intergenerational effects of changes in the distribution of women's education on the educational distribution of their offspring's generation in China. Different from the conventional retrospective studies of intergenerational mobility that have focused on associations between parents' and children's socioeconomic attainment, the prospective approach adopted in this study examines the relative importance of both the demographic pathways, namely assortative mating and fertility differentials, and the social mobility pathway to the intergenerational transmission processes in a changing socioeconomic and policy context of China. First, I found a positive intergenerational effect across all three cohorts of women born between 1925 and 1965: an increase in women's education led to an improvement in their daughters' educational attainment. Second, the two demographic pathways, marriage and fertility, and intergenerational transmission jointly affected the educational attainment of the next generation in a complex way. While assortative mating strengthened the intergenerational effects, educational differentials in fertility dampened the intergenerational effects, since improvement in women's education increased their chances of marrying better-educated husbands but reduced their fertility levels. Third, the intergenerational effects and the respective effects of two demographic pathways became smaller across cohorts, which could be attributed jointly to educational expansion at the national level and changing family planning policies experienced by different cohorts of women and their offspring. Fourth, rural/urban comparison further demonstrated the existing educational inequality in contemporary China.
引用
收藏
页码:243 / 273
页数:31
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] The intergenerational effects of parental higher education: Evidence from changes in university accessibility
    Suhonen, Tuomo
    Karhunen, Hannu
    JOURNAL OF PUBLIC ECONOMICS, 2019, 176 : 195 - 217
  • [2] The effect of education expansion on intergenerational transmission of education: Evidence from China
    Liu, Ling
    Wan, Qian
    CHINA ECONOMIC REVIEW, 2019, 57
  • [3] The intergenerational effects of changes in women's educational attainments
    Mare, Robert D.
    Maralani, Vida
    AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW, 2006, 71 (04) : 542 - 564
  • [4] The Demographic Dividend or the Education Dividend? Evidence from China's Economic Growth
    Zhou, Jian
    Deng, Jingjing
    Li, Li
    Wang, Shuang
    SUSTAINABILITY, 2023, 15 (09)
  • [5] Women's education and marriage decisions: Evidence from China
    Li, Xue
    Cheng, Hua
    PACIFIC ECONOMIC REVIEW, 2019, 24 (01) : 92 - 112
  • [6] Intergenerational effects of improving women's property rights: evidence from India
    Bose, Nayana
    Das, Shreyasee
    OXFORD DEVELOPMENT STUDIES, 2021, 49 (03) : 277 - 290
  • [7] The intergenerational impact of house prices on education: evidence from China
    You, Jing
    Ding, Xinxin
    Nino-Zarazua, Miguel
    Wang, Sangui
    JOURNAL OF HOUSING ECONOMICS, 2021, 54
  • [8] Export expansion and intergenerational education mobility: Evidence from China
    Lou, Jing
    Li, Jie
    CHINA ECONOMIC REVIEW, 2022, 73
  • [9] The Intergenerational Effects of Political Influence: Evidence from China
    Shen, Menghan
    JOURNAL OF DEVELOPMENT STUDIES, 2019, 55 (07): : 1398 - 1417
  • [10] The effect of intergenerational mobility on family education investment: evidence from China
    Zhao, Nan
    Liao, Wanqing
    Xia, Jun
    Zhang, Zizhe
    HUMANITIES & SOCIAL SCIENCES COMMUNICATIONS, 2023, 10 (01):