Universal child care and longer-run effects on parental health and behaviors: Evidence from a Canadian universal child care program
Authors: Laetitia Lebihan, Catherine Haeck, Pierre Lefebvre, and Philip Merrigan
Overview
Abstract (English)
In this paper, we study the long-run impact of a universal child care policy in Quebec on parental health and parenting practices. Using data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Child and Youth, we follow treated families for more than 9 years and investigate the impact well beyond the first few years of the policy. A non-experimental evaluation framework based on multiple pre- and post-treatment periods is used to estimate the policy effects. We show that the policy increased mothers’ depression scores with preschool children as well as scores of inappropriate parenting behavior. The policy increased hostile and aversive parenting and reduced positive interaction and consistent parenting. However, negative effects of the program on parental behaviors vanish when the child is in school. Moreover, we find that this pattern persists even ten years after the implementation of the reform.
Abstract (French)
Please note that abstracts only appear in the language of the publication and might not have a translation.
Details
Type | Working paper (online) |
---|---|
Author | Laetitia Lebihan, Catherine Haeck, Pierre Lefebvre, and Philip Merrigan |
Publication Year | 2015 |
Title | Universal child care and longer-run effects on parental health and behaviors: Evidence from a Canadian universal child care program |
Series | Reserach Group on Human Capital Working Paper |
Number | 15-Apr |
City | Montréal, QC |
Publication Language | English |
- Laetitia Lebihan
- Working paper (online)
- Universal child care and longer-run effects on parental health and behaviors: Evidence from a Canadian universal child care program
- Laetitia Lebihan, Catherine Haeck, Pierre Lefebvre, and Philip Merrigan
- Reserach Group on Human Capital Working Paper
- 2015
- 15-Apr