Gender Inequality Reinforced: The Impact of a Child's Health Shock on Parents' Labor Market Trajectories.
Maria VaalavuoHenri SalokangasOssi TahvonenPublished in: Demography (2023)
This article employs a couple-level framework to examine how a child's severe illness affects within-family gender inequality. We study parental labor market responses to a child's cancer diagnosis by exploiting an event-study methodology and rich individual-level administrative data on hospitalizations and labor market variables for the total population in Finland. We find that a child's cancer negatively affects the mother's and the father's labor income. The effect is considerably larger for women, increasing gender inequality beyond the well-documented motherhood penalty. We test three potential moderators explaining the more negative outcomes among mothers: (1) breadwinner status, (2) adherence to traditional gender roles and conservative values, and (3) the child's care needs. We find that mothers who are the main breadwinner experience a smaller reduction in their household income contribution than other mothers. Additionally, working in a gender-typical industry and a child's augmented care needs reinforce mothers' gendered responses. These findings contribute to the literature by providing new insights into gender roles when a child falls ill and demonstrating the effects of child health on gender inequality in two-parent households.
Keyphrases
- mental health
- healthcare
- systematic review
- palliative care
- health insurance
- depressive symptoms
- public health
- pregnant women
- physical activity
- papillary thyroid
- type diabetes
- quality improvement
- early onset
- affordable care act
- young adults
- breast cancer risk
- data analysis
- pain management
- chronic pain
- climate change
- adipose tissue
- machine learning
- deep learning
- skeletal muscle