Center for Population, Inequality, and Policy, University of California, Irvine, CA, 92697, USA.
Joe C. Wen School of Population & Public Health, University of California, Irvine, CA, 92697, USA.
Nat Commun. 2024 Sep 17;15(1):8168. doi: 10.1038/s41467-024-52428-w.
Cash transfer policies have been widely discussed as mechanisms to curb intergenerational transmission of socioeconomic disadvantage. In this paper, we take advantage of a large casino-funded family transfer program introduced in a Southeastern American Indian Tribe to generate difference-in-difference estimates of the link between children's cash transfer exposure and third grade math and reading test scores of their offspring. Here we show greater math (0.25 standard deviation [SD], p =.0148, 95% Confidence Interval [CI]: 0.05, 0.45) and reading (0.28 SD, p = .0066, 95% CI: 0.08, 0.49) scores among American Indian students whose mother was exposed ten years longer than other American Indian students to the cash transfer during her childhood (or relative to the non-American Indian student referent group). Exploratory analyses find that a mother's decision to pursue higher education and delay fertility appears to explain some, but not all, of the relation between cash transfers and children's test scores. In this rural population, large cash transfers have the potential to reduce intergenerational cycles of poverty-related educational outcomes.
现金转移政策作为遏制代际社会经济劣势传递的机制已被广泛讨论。在本文中,我们利用美国东南部一个印第安部落实施的一项大型赌场资助的家庭转移计划,来产生儿童现金转移暴露与后代三年级数学和阅读测试成绩之间联系的差分效应估计。结果显示,在接受现金转移的母亲比其他印第安学生多暴露十年的情况下,印第安学生的数学(0.25 标准差,p=.0148,95%置信区间[CI]:0.05,0.45)和阅读(0.28 标准差,p=.0066,95% CI:0.08,0.49)分数更高。探索性分析发现,母亲接受高等教育和推迟生育的决定似乎可以解释一部分,但不是全部,现金转移与儿童考试成绩之间的关系。在这个农村地区,大量的现金转移有可能打破与贫困相关的教育成果的代际循环。