Research School of Economics, CBE, Australian National University, Canberra, Australia.
National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies, Tokyo, Japan.
Demography. 2017 Oct;54(5):1677-1714. doi: 10.1007/s13524-017-0613-z.
Since the end of 1990s, approximately 160 million Chinese rural workers migrated to cities for work. Because of restrictions on migrant access to local health and education systems, many rural children are left behind in home villages to grow up without parental care. This article examines how exposure to cumulative parental migration affects children's health and education outcomes. Using the Rural-Urban Migration Survey in China (RUMiC) data, we measure the share of children's lifetime during which parents were away from home. We instrument this measure of parental absence with weather changes in their home villages when parents were aged 16-25, when they were most likely to initiate migration. Results show a sizable adverse effect of exposure to parental migration on the health and education outcomes of children: in particular, boys. We also find that the use of the contemporaneous measure for parental migration in previous studies is likely to underestimate the effect of exposure to parental migration on children's outcomes.
自 20 世纪 90 年代末以来,约有 1.6 亿中国农村劳动力向城市转移就业。由于移民在当地获得医疗和教育系统方面受到限制,许多农村儿童被留在农村老家,在没有父母照顾的情况下长大。本文考察了儿童长期接触父母迁移对其健康和教育成果的影响。本文利用中国农村劳动力迁移调查(RUMiC)数据,衡量了儿童一生中父母离家在外的时间比例。我们将父母 16-25 岁时家乡的天气变化作为父母外出的衡量指标,因为此时他们最有可能开始迁移。研究结果表明,儿童接触父母迁移对其健康和教育成果有相当大的不利影响:特别是对男孩。我们还发现,之前的研究中使用父母迁移的同期衡量指标可能低估了儿童接触父母迁移对其成果的影响。