Age culture, school-entry cutoff, and the choices of birth month and school-entry timing in South Korea

被引:13
|
作者
Kim, Taehoon [1 ]
机构
[1] Kyung Hee Univ, Dept Econ, Seoul, South Korea
关键词
Academic redshirting; birth timing selection; Confucian age culture; educational achievement; Korean age reckoning; school-entry cutoff;
D O I
10.1017/dem.2020.16
中图分类号
C921 [人口统计学];
学科分类号
摘要
This study explores how the distinctive Korean age reckoning, the Confucian age culture, and the school-entry-cutoff date affect the decisions of parents on both birth and school-entry timing for their children in Korea. There is a traditional method of age calculation in Korea that all people get one year older on January 1. Korea also has a distinctive age culture influenced by Confucianism. I find a substantial amount of birth and school-entry timing selections around the Korean age-cutoff date, January 1. The estimation results show that children born in January and February delayed school entry by 18.2-21.2 percentage points more than those born in November and December and 24% of births moved from one week before January 1 to one week after when the school-entry cutoff was March 1. After the school-entry cutoff has changed to January 1, children barely delay school enrollment, while more births are moved from December to January: 42% of births are shifted within the 7-day window. These behaviors are made by two motives: (1) parents want their children to have the same Korean age with their classmates because of the Confucian age culture; (2) they also want their children to be relatively older to have academic advantages.
引用
收藏
页码:33 / 65
页数:33
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