Hao Lingxin, Yeung Wei-Jun Jean
Department of Sociology, Johns Hopkins University, 3400 N. Charles Street, Baltimore, MD, 21218, USA,
Demography. 2015 Jun;52(3):835-60. doi: 10.1007/s13524-015-0386-1.
As consumption expenditures are increasingly recognized as direct measures of children's material well-being, they provide new insights into the process of intergenerational transfers from parents to children. Little is known, however, about how parents allocate financial resources to individual children. To fill this gap, we develop a conceptual framework based on stratification theory, human capital theory, and the child-development perspective; exploit unique child-level expenditure data from Child Supplements of the PSID; and employ quantile regression to model the distribution of parental spending on children. Overall, we find strong evidence supporting our hypotheses regarding the effects of socioeconomic status (SES), race, and parental expectation. Our nuanced estimates suggest that (1) parental education, occupation, and family income have differential effects on parental spending, with education being the most influential determinant; (2) net of SES, race continues to be a significant predictor of parental spending on children; and (3) parental expectation plays a crucial role in determining whether parents place a premium on child development in spending and how parents prioritize different categories of spending.
由于消费支出越来越被视为衡量儿童物质福祉的直接指标,它们为代际从父母向子女转移的过程提供了新的见解。然而,对于父母如何将财政资源分配给各个子女,我们却知之甚少。为了填补这一空白,我们基于分层理论、人力资本理论和儿童发展视角构建了一个概念框架;利用来自收入动态研究小组(PSID)儿童补充调查中独特的儿童层面支出数据;并运用分位数回归对父母在子女身上的支出分布进行建模。总体而言,我们发现有力证据支持了我们关于社会经济地位(SES)、种族和父母期望影响的假设。我们细致入微的估计表明:(1)父母的教育程度、职业和家庭收入对父母支出有不同影响,其中教育是最具影响力的决定因素;(2)在扣除社会经济地位因素后,种族仍然是父母在子女身上支出的重要预测指标;(3)父母期望在决定父母是否在支出中优先考虑儿童发展以及如何对不同类别的支出进行优先排序方面起着关键作用。