Title
Do Fathers Matter?: Paternal Mortality and Children's Long-Run Outcomes
Author(s)
Dejan Kovac Dejan Kovac (CERGE-EI and Princeton University)
Abstract
Parental mortality is associated with a range of negative child outcomes. This paper studies the effect of paternal mortality on children's health and schooling outcomes using the universe of veterans' children born in Croatia, and all of the paternal deaths and injuries resulting from the 1991-1995 Croatian-Serbian war. Using linked administrative data, I find large negative effects of paternal death on high-school GPA, school absences, behavior problems, and hospitalizations. I address potentially non-random selection into paternal death by using within-military unit differences in the extent of injury or death, essentially assuming that the members of a military unit all had similar probabilities of being killed or injured because they fought in the same battles. I am also able to shed light on an important mechanism underlying the estimated effects. Surviving spouses of those killed or injured were well compensated, so that the death of a father did not have a negative effect on household incomes. I find that a death or injury that occurred during the in-utero period has much larger effects than a death or injury in early childhood, suggesting that much of the negative effect is due to maternal stress.
Creation Date
2017-03
Section URL ID
IRS
Paper Number
609
URL
https://dataspace.princeton.edu/bitstream/88435/dsp01td96k5012/3/609.pdf
File Function
Jel
I12, I21, J13
Keyword(s)
Parental mortality, schooling outcomes, hospitalisations, in-utero shocks, prenatal, postnatal
Suppress
false
Series
1