Migration Restrictions Can Create Gender Inequality: The Story of China's Left-Behind Children / Xuwen Gao, Wenquan Liang, Ahmed Mushfiq Mobarak, Ran Song.
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- Fertility • Family Planning • Child Care • Children • Youth
- Fertility • Family Planning • Child Care • Children • Youth
- Economics of Gender • Non-labor Discrimination
- Economics of Gender • Non-labor Discrimination
- Regional Migration • Regional Labor Markets • Population • Neighborhood Characteristics
- Regional Migration • Regional Labor Markets • Population • Neighborhood Characteristics
- J13
- J16
- R23
- Hardcopy version available to institutional subscribers
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Working Paper | Biblioteca Digital | Colección NBER | nber w30990 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Not For Loan |
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February 2023.
About 11% of the Chinese population are rural-urban migrants with a rural hukou that severely restricts their children's access to urban schools. As a result, 69 million children are left behind in rural areas. We use two regression-discontinuity designs - based on school enrollment age cutoffs and a 2014 policy change that more severely restricted migrants' access to schooling - to document that migrants become discontinuously more likely to leave middle-school-aged daughters (but not sons) behind in poor rural areas without either parent present exactly when schooling becomes expensive and restricted. The effect is larger when the daughter has a male sibling. Migrant parents send significantly less remittances back to daughters than sons. Although China's hukou mobility restrictions are not gender-specific in intent, they have larger adverse effects on girls. Rural residents adjacent to cities that experience shocks to labor demand after China's accession to the WTO are more likely to separate from children to take advantage of new opportunities in cities. Those workers earn much more and advance economically, but longitudinal data reveals that their children complete fewer years of schooling, remain poor, and have worse mental and physical health later in life.
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