Intergenerational effects of disability benefits – Evidence from Canadian social assistance programs
Authors: Kelly Chen, Lars Osberg, and Shelley Phipps
Overview
Abstract (English)
Using Statistics Canada’s National Longitudinal Survey of Children and Youth (NLSCY), this paper presents the first evidence on whether increased disability benefits reduce the negative consequences of parental disability on children’s well-being. Using a continuous difference-in-differences (DD) approach, we analyze whether gaps in developmental outcomes between children of disabled and non-disabled parents vary with the benefit level. We find strong evidence that higher parental disability benefits lead to improvements in children’s cognitive functioning and non-cognitive development, as measured by math scores in standardized tests, and hyperactive and emotional anxiety symptoms. The effect is larger on children with a disabled mother than on those with a disabled father – which is consistent with the “good mother hypothesis” that a mother’s income is more likely than a father’s to be spent in ways that benefit the children.
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 | Kelly Chen, Lars Osberg, and Shelley Phipps |
Publication Year | 2013 |
Title | Intergenerational effects of disability benefits – Evidence from Canadian social assistance programs |
Series | CLSRN Working Papers |
Number | 122 |
City | Vancouver, BC |
Institution | Canadian Labour Market and Skills Researcher Network |
Publication Language | English |
- Kelly Chen
- Working paper (online)
- Intergenerational effects of disability benefits – Evidence from Canadian social assistance programs
- Kelly Chen, Lars Osberg, and Shelley Phipps
- CLSRN Working Papers
- 2013
- 122