Agarwal Sumit, Qian Wenlan, Sing Tien Foo, Tan Poh Lin
National University of Singapore.
Popul Stud (Camb). 2021 Jul;75(2):191-207. doi: 10.1080/00324728.2020.1864458. Epub 2021 Jan 27.
This paper examines the long-term effects of birth cohort size on life outcomes. Using administrative data from Singapore, we study the outcomes of large birth cohorts created by the Chinese superstitious practice of zodiac birth timing, where parents prefer to give birth in the year of the Dragon. This practice is followed exclusively by the Chinese majority, with no similar patterns detected among non-Chinese minorities, allowing us to differentiate cohort size effects from confounding year-of-birth effects. Despite government efforts to increase public educational resources for these cohorts, Chinese Dragons earn lower incomes and are less likely to gain admission to national universities. There is also evidence of negative externalities on non-practising populations who happen to enter the labour market at the same time as Chinese Dragons. Our analysis suggests that the adverse life outcomes are not due to selection, but rather reflect the aggregate resource implications of birth cohort size.Supplementary material is available for this article at: https://doi.org/10.1080/00324728.2020.1864458.
本文考察了出生队列规模对人生结局的长期影响。利用新加坡的行政数据,我们研究了因中国生肖生育时机迷信习俗而产生的大型出生队列的结局,即父母更倾向于在龙年生育。这种习俗仅为占多数的华人所遵循,在非华少数族裔中未发现类似模式,这使我们能够区分队列规模效应与出生年份混杂效应。尽管政府努力为这些队列增加公共教育资源,但属龙的华人收入较低,进入国立大学的可能性也较小。还有证据表明,与属龙的华人同时进入劳动力市场的非遵循该习俗人群会受到负面外部影响。我们的分析表明,不利的人生结局并非由选择导致,而是反映了出生队列规模对总体资源的影响。本文的补充材料可在以下网址获取:https://doi.org/10.1080/00324728.2020.1864458 。