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The Influence of Neighborhood Poverty During Childhood on Fertility, Education, and Earnings Outcomes 

Authors: George Galster a;  Dave E. Marcotte b;  Marv Mandell b;  Hal Wolman c; Nancy Augustine c
Affiliations:   a Wayne State University, Detroit, MI, USA
b University of Maryland, Baltimore County, USA
c The George Washington University, Washington, DC, USA
DOI: 10.1080/02673030701474669
Publication Frequency: 6 issues per year
Published in: journal Housing Studies, Volume 22, Issue 5 September 2007 , pages 723 - 751
Full text options: no full text options are available.


Abstract

Previous studies attempting to estimate the relative importance of family, neighborhood, residential stability, and homeownership status characteristics of childhood environments on young adult outcomes have: (1) treated these variables as though they were independent, and (2) were limited in their ability to control for household selection effects. This study offers advances in both areas. First, it treats the key explanatory variables above as endogenously determined (sometimes simultaneously so). Second, to deal both with this endogeneity and the selection problem, instrumental variable estimates are computed for how childhood average values of neighborhood poverty rate relate to fertility, education and labor market outcomes in later life. The paper analyzes data from the US Panel Study of Income Dynamics (PSID) that are matched with Census tract data, thereby permitting documentation of a wide range of family background and contextual characteristics. For children born between 1968 and 1974, data are analyzed on their first 18 years and various outcomes in 1999 when they are between 25 and 31 years of age. The application of instrumental variables substantially attenuates the apparent neighborhood effects. Nevertheless, support is found for the proposition that cumulative neighborhood poverty effects averaged over childhood have an independent, non-trivial causal effect on high school attainment and earnings.
Keywords: Childhood; neighbourhood effects; socioeconomic success; young adult outcomes; educational attainment; earnings; homeownership; family background; PSID
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