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New York Times, 4/18/2006. Unequal investments. Bianchi et al. (2004) Class inequality is increasing Growing inequality in child investments? Is the class effect growing, too? Spending on children CEX Time spent with children Time diary data Health behaviors
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Unequal investments • Bianchi et al. (2004) • Class inequality is increasing • Growing inequality in child investments? • Is the class effect growing, too? • Spending on children • CEX • Time spent with children • Time diary data • Health behaviors • National Health Interview Survey
Spending on children • Daycare and child care • In center, home, or other’s home • Clothing and shoes for children • Other expenses • Infant furniture/equipment, bus fees, playground equipment, school supplies, tuition, school meals, toys, etc. • Trends, and regression • Controls for age, race, married, # kids, # of earners
Increasing inequality? Gini coefficients
Class effects Total less child care
Class effects Clothing and shoes
Time with children Mothers, total ‘primary’ child care
Time with children Fathers, total ‘primary’ child care
Time with children Mothers, ‘engagement’ time
Time with children Fathers, ‘engagement’ time
Health behaviors • Behaviors • Current smoking • No doctor visits in last 2 years • Obese • Exercise activity past 2 weeks • Trends • Regression with controls • Age, married, race, # kids, employment
College education effects Fathers
College education effects Mothers
Conclusions • Class inequality exists on all measures, 1970s-present • As class inequality increases, gaps between children increase • Class effects are not increasing • Except effect of education on smoking • Under economic squeeze, parents find ways to protect kids