| Literature DB >> 30996393 |
Nicola Ciccarelli1, Arthur Van Soest1.
Abstract
Using panel data on the age group 50-70 in 15 European countries, we analyze the effects of providing informal care to parents, parents-in-law, stepparents, and grandparents on employment status and work hours. We account for fixed individual effects and test for endogeneity of caregiving using moments exploiting standard instruments (e.g., parental death) as well as higher-order moment conditions (Lewbel instruments). Specification tests suggest that informal care provision and daily caregiving can be treated as exogenous variables. We find a significant and negative effect of daily caregiving on employment status and work hours. This effect is particularly strong for women. On the other hand, providing care at a weekly (or less than weekly) frequency does not significantly affect paid work. We do not find evidence of heterogeneous effects of caregiving on paid work across European regions.Entities:
Keywords: Elderly; Informal care; Labor supply; Panel data; SHARE
Year: 2018 PMID: 30996393 PMCID: PMC6434966 DOI: 10.1007/s10645-018-9323-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Economist (Leiden) ISSN: 0013-063X
Selected studies on the effects of informal caregiving on paid work
| Study | Sample | Methodology | Main results |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Berecki-Gisolf et al. ( | Australia, 2001 & 2004, women | Transition models | For women in paid employment in 2001, continuing or starting informal care (at least 7 hours per week) decreases the probability of being employed in 2004 |
|
Bolin et al. ( | 11 European countries (SHARE data), 2004, age 50–64 | Cross-section & instrumental variables | Informal care for one of the parents living outside the household decreases labor market participation by 22-percentage-points (p-value = 0.11). Insignificant effect on work hours or wages |
|
Carmichael et al. ( | United Kingdom, 1991–2005; men, age 20–65; women, age 20–60 | Transition models | Transition to providing care (at least 20 hours per week) more than doubles the chance to stop working |
|
Ciani ( | 13 European countries, 1994–2001; men, age 40–64; women, age 40–59 | Cross-section & instrumental variables; | IV without fixed effects: strong negative impact of informal care on labor market participation (ie., 24-percentage-points decrease). IV with fixed effects: small and insignificant effects of informal care |
|
Crespo and Mira ( | 11 European countries (SHARE data), 2004 & 2006; women, age 50–60 |
| IV with fixed effects: for women that provide daily caregiving because of parental disability, daily caregiving implies a 45–65% decrease of the probability of being employed in the case of Southern Europe (LATE estimate). The effect of daily caregiving on employment is negligible in the case of Northern Europe or Central Europe |
|
Heitmueller ( | United Kingdom, 1991–2002; men, age 16–64; women, age 16–59 | Cross-section & instrumental variables; | Cross-sectional IV estimates: large negative impact of caregiving on market participation (ie., a 34-p.-p. up to 42-p.-p. decrease). Probit estimates: intensive caregiving (ie., more than 20 h per week) decreases market participation by 12-percentage-points. No significant effects in the case of non-intensive caregiving |
|
Jacobs et al. ( | Canada, 2007, age 55–69 | Multinomial logit model (options: full pension, partial pension, back from retirement) | 15 (or more) hours of informal care per week more than doubles the probability of full retirement with respect to being employed |
|
Leigh ( | Australia, 2001–2007, age 25–64 | Cross-section & | Significant negative impact of caregiving on market participation (i.e., 5-percentage-points decrease). Marginally significant effect on work hours (i.e., -1.2 hours per week). No significant effect on hourly wages |
|
Lilly et al. ( | Canada, 2002, age 45+ | Cross-section without instrumental variables | Primary caregiving has a negative impact on market participation: 6.2-percentage-points decrease for women and 7.2-percentage-points decrease for men, respectively. No significant effect on work hours or wages; no significant effects of non-primary caregiving |
|
Michaud et al. ( | England, 2000–2005; women, age 25–59 |
| Small negative effects of caregiving (for a person living either inside or outsidethe household) on paid employment |
|
Nguyen and Connelly ( | Australia, 2008, working age | Multinomial logit with instrumental variables | Primary caregiving implies a negative impact on labor market participation (i.e., 12-percentage-points decrease). Insignificant effect of non-primary caregiving |
|
Van Houtven et al. ( | USA, 1992–2008, age 51–78 |
| For women, informal care increases the retirement probability by 2.4-percentage-points. Conditional on working in the current wave, (intensive) caregiving has negative impact on work hours. No significant effect on wages |
Panel data studies that do not use instrumental variables are reported in italics. Panel data studies that use instrumental variables are marked in bold
Countries included in the longitudinal dataset
| Geographical region | Wave 1 | Wave 2 | Wave 4 | Wave 5 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||
| Denmark | Northern Europe | X | X | X | X |
| Sweden | Northern Europe | X | X | X | X |
| Austria | Western Europe | X | X | X | X |
| Belgium | Western Europe | X | X | X | X |
| France | Western Europe | X | X | X | X |
| Germany | Western Europe | X | X | X | X |
| Netherlands | Western Europe | X | X | X | X |
| Switzerland | Western Europe | X | X | X | X |
| Italy | Southern Europe | X | X | X | X |
| Spain | Southern Europe | X | X | X | X |
|
| |||||
| Greece | Southern Europe | X | X | ||
| Czech Republic | Eastern Europe | X | X | X | |
| Estonia | Eastern Europe | X | X | ||
| Poland | Eastern Europe | X | X | ||
| Slovenia | Eastern Europe | X | X |
Data for 10 nations is available for all waves used in analysis (i.e, waves 1–2 and 4–5). Data for Greece, Czech Republic, Estonia, Poland and Slovenia is available only for some waves
Descriptive statistics on variables for paid work
| Participation in paid work (employment dummy) | Weekly hours of paid work if employed employed | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Males | Females | Males | Females | |||||||
| Obs. | Mean | Obs. | Mean | Obs. | Mean | SD | Obs. | Mean | SD | |
| (1) | (2) | (3) | (4) | (5) | (6) | (7) | (8) | (9) | (10) | |
|
| ||||||||||
| Denmark | 945 | 0.55 | 1033 | 0.47 | 515 | 39.10 | 10.60 | 477 | 34.35 | 8.56 |
| Sweden | 875 | 0.53 | 1031 | 0.48 | 465 | 40.40 | 10.13 | 490 | 36.44 | 8.86 |
|
| ||||||||||
| Austria | 899 | 0.31 | 1248 | 0.22 | 280 | 42.77 | 11.34 | 275 | 32.95 | 13.64 |
| Belgium | 1656 | 0.36 | 1799 | 0.30 | 591 | 41.48 | 12.48 | 544 | 32.00 | 13.62 |
| France | 1209 | 0.34 | 1600 | 0.35 | 408 | 40.94 | 12.00 | 559 | 34.53 | 11.72 |
| Germany | 687 | 0.34 | 838 | 0.37 | 232 | 43.36 | 11.15 | 311 | 30.87 | 13.28 |
| Netherlands | 951 | 0.41 | 1353 | 0.33 | 391 | 37.27 | 10.54 | 451 | 24.89 | 11.96 |
| Switzerland | 852 | 0.59 | 1047 | 0.53 | 502 | 43.08 | 12.69 | 545 | 29.21 | 14.64 |
|
| ||||||||||
| Greece | 438 | 0.59 | 472 | 0.26 | 257 | 44.28 | 18.60 | 117 | 38.40 | 17.11 |
| Italy | 824 | 0.28 | 1329 | 0.17 | 226 | 40.08 | 10.72 | 227 | 34.07 | 11.41 |
| Spain | 635 | 0.37 | 1017 | 0.23 | 232 | 41.02 | 13.65 | 228 | 34.09 | 14.56 |
|
| ||||||||||
| Czech Republic | 629 | 0.31 | 1322 | 0.21 | 194 | 42.82 | 10.69 | 284 | 41.01 | 11.47 |
| Estonia | 559 | 0.45 | 1095 | 0.48 | 247 | 40.87 | 9.45 | 521 | 37.82 | 9.66 |
| Poland | 238 | 0.26 | 406 | 0.12 | 61 | 44.39 | 10.25 | 47 | 39.62 | 10.72 |
| Slovenia | 394 | 0.26 | 486 | 0.21 | 99 | 42.09 | 8.12 | 99 | 40.64 | 8.00 |
| Total | 11791 | 0.40 | 16076 | 0.32 | 4700 | 41.19 | 11.98 | 5175 | 33.62 | 12.69 |
SHARE 2004–2013; ages 50–70. Estimation sample for static model in first differences (Table 5)
The employment dummy is based upon the question “In general, which of the following best describes your current employment situation?” (a) Employed or self-employed, (b) unemployed, (c) permanently sick or disabled, (d) homemaker, (e) retired, (f) other (i.e., rentier, living off own property, student, doing voluntary work)”. It is equal to 1 if the respondent answers “employed or self-employed”, 0 otherwise
Weekly work hours conditional on being employed are based upon the question “Regardless of your basic contracted hours, how many hours a week do you usually work in this job, excluding meal breaks but including any paid or unpaid overtime?”
The effects of caregiving on paid work hours—OLS, FD, (Static) FDIV, and AB (Arellano Bond) estimates
| (1) | (2) | (3) | (4) | (5) | (6) | (7) | (8) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| OLS | OLS | FD | FD | FDIV | FDIV | AB | AB | |
| Second stage | Second stage | Second stage | Second stage | |||||
|
| ||||||||
| Informal caregiving | 1.829*** | – | – | 0.205 | – | – | ||
| (0.353) | (0.262) | (1.574) | (0.636) | |||||
| Daily caregiving |
| – | – | – | ||||
| (0.574) | (0.448) | (1.886) | (1.057) | |||||
| Work hours | – | – | – | – | – | – | 0.482*** | 0.483*** |
| – | – | – | – | – | – | (0.028) | (0.028) | |
| Individual FE? | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Wave FE? | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Controls? | All | All | All | All | All | All | All | All |
| Observations | 27,621 | 27,618 | 27,621 | 27,618 | 27,621 | 27,618 | 7522 | 7522 |
| N (persons) | 20,788 | 20,786 | 20,788 | 20,786 | 20,788 | 20,786 | 5,270 | 5270 |
| Adjusted | 0.250 | 0.251 | 0.010 | 0.011 | – | – | – | – |
|
| ||||||||
| F-statistic (excluded IVs) | – | – | – | – | 28.908 | 10.979 | 840.009 | 839.039 |
| Hansen J test (p-value) | – | – | – | – | 0.426 | 0.344 | 0.904 | 0.907 |
| Hausman test (p-value) | – | – | – | – | 0.699 | 0.546 | 0.000 | 0.000 |
|
| ||||||||
| p-value (test: | – | – | – | – | – | – | 0.029 | 0.027 |
***, **, *. Robust standard errors clustered at the individual level in parentheses. “OLS”, “FD”, “FDIV”, “AB” refer to (pooled) ordinary least squares, first difference, first difference IV, Arellano Bond estimators, respectively. See Table 16 (electronic supplementary materials) for full OLS and FD estimates. See Tables 17 and 18 (electronic supplementary materials) for more details on FDIV and AB estimates, respectively
Controls include age, age squared, marriage status (i.e., a dummy variable equal to 1 for married persons, 0 otherwise), number of children and household size
Descriptive statistics on variables for caregiving
| Informal caregiving | Daily caregiving | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Males | Females | Males | Females | |||||
| Obs. | Mean | Obs. | Mean | Obs. | Mean | Obs. | Mean | |
| (1) | (2) | (3) | (4) | (5) | (6) | (7) | (8) | |
|
| ||||||||
| Denmark | 945 | 0.189 | 1033 | 0.204 | 945 | 0.008 | 1033 | 0.010 |
| Sweden | 875 | 0.151 | 1031 | 0.166 | 875 | 0.005 | 1031 | 0.010 |
|
| ||||||||
| Austria | 899 | 0.080 | 1248 | 0.097 | 899 | 0.032 | 1248 | 0.038 |
| Belgium | 1656 | 0.156 | 1799 | 0.174 | 1656 | 0.023 | 1799 | 0.042 |
| France | 1209 | 0.118 | 1600 | 0.158 | 1209 | 0.026 | 1600 | 0.040 |
| Germany | 687 | 0.106 | 838 | 0.142 | 687 | 0.020 | 838 | 0.035 |
| Netherlands | 951 | 0.128 | 1353 | 0.132 | 951 | 0.008 | 1353 | 0.019 |
| Switzerland | 852 | 0.112 | 1047 | 0.159 | 852 | 0.011 | 1046 | 0.024 |
|
| ||||||||
| Greece | 438 | 0.041 | 472 | 0.057 | 438 | 0.007 | 472 | 0.030 |
| Italy | 824 | 0.102 | 1329 | 0.120 | 824 | 0.047 | 1329 | 0.075 |
| Spain | 635 | 0.055 | 1017 | 0.072 | 635 | 0.020 | 1016 | 0.035 |
|
| ||||||||
| Czech Republic | 629 | 0.132 | 1322 | 0.134 | 629 | 0.049 | 1321 | 0.061 |
| Estonia | 559 | 0.107 | 1095 | 0.128 | 559 | 0.029 | 1095 | 0.034 |
| Poland | 238 | 0.025 | 406 | 0.071 | 238 | 0.004 | 406 | 0.037 |
| Slovenia | 394 | 0.056 | 486 | 0.095 | 394 | 0.036 | 486 | 0.051 |
| Total | 11791 | 0.117 | 16076 | 0.135 | 11791 | 0.022 | 16073* | 0.037 |
SHARE 2004–2013; ages 50–70. Estimation sample for static model in first differences (Table 5)
Three observations are missing
Informal caregiving is a dummy variable taking value 1 for respondents that helped a “parent” that lives in another household, 0 otherwise
Daily caregiving is a dummy variable taking value 1 for respondents that helped a “parent” at daily (or almost daily) frequency, 0 otherwise, constructed using the question: “How often in the last year did you care for this person?” with possible answers (a) almost every day, (b) almost every week, (c) almost every month, (d) less often
Descriptive statistics for control variables
| Description | Obs. | Mean | SD | Min | Max | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||||
| Age | Age in years | 27,867 | 61.46 | 4.90 | 52 | 70 |
| Age squared | Age squared | 27,867 | 3801.14 | 601.14 | 2704 | 4900 |
| Married | 1 if married or partnered | 27,867 | 0.64 | 0.48 | 0 | 1 |
| Number of children | Total number of living children | 27,867 | 2.06 | 1.29 | 0 | 16 |
| Household size | Number of persons living in the household | 27,867 | 2.12 | 1.01 | 1 | 10 |
|
| ||||||
| Age | Age in years | 11,791 | 61.54 | 4.92 | 52 | 70 |
| Age squared | Age squared | 11,791 | 3810.93 | 604.20 | 2704 | 4900 |
| Married | 1 if married or partnered | 11,791 | 0.71 | 0.45 | 0 | 1 |
| Number of children | Total number of living children | 11,791 | 2.02 | 1.33 | 0 | 16 |
| Household size | Number of persons living in the household | 11,791 | 2.22 | 1.03 | 1 | 10 |
|
| ||||||
| Age | Age in years | 16,076 | 61.40 | 4.88 | 52 | 70 |
| Age squared | Age squared | 16,076 | 3793.97 | 598.81 | 2704 | 4900 |
| Married | 1 if married or partnered | 16,076 | 0.59 | 0.49 | 0 | 1 |
| Number of children | Total number of living children | 16,076 | 2.08 | 1.26 | 0 | 13 |
| Household size | Number of persons living in the household | 16,076 | 2.04 | 0.98 | 1 | 9 |
SHARE, 2004–2013, ages 50–70. Estimation sample for static model in first differences (Table 5)
The effects of caregiving on employment—OLS, FD, (Static) FDIV, and AB (Arellano Bond) estimates
| (1) | (2) | (3) | (4) | (5) | (6) | (7) | (8) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| OLS | OLS | FD | FD | FDIV | FDIV | AB | AB | |
| Second stage | Second stage | Second stage | Second stage | |||||
|
| ||||||||
| Informal caregiving | 0.057*** | – | – | 0.028 | – | – | ||
| (0.008) | (0.006) | (0.038) | (0.016) | |||||
| Daily caregiving | – | – | – | – | ||||
| (0.015) | (0.011) | (0.045) | (0.025) | |||||
| Employment | – | – | – | – | – | – | 0.509*** | 0.509*** |
| – | – | – | – | – | – | (0.026) | (0.026) | |
| Individual FE? | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Wave FE? | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Controls? | All | All | All | All | All | All | All | All |
| Observations | 27,867 | 27,864 | 27,867 | 27,864 | 27,867 | 27,864 | 7609 | 7609 |
| N (persons) | 20,954 | 20,952 | 20,954 | 20,952 | 20,954 | 20,952 | 5321 | 5321 |
| Adjusted | 0.283 | 0.283 | 0.010 | 0.010 | – | – | – | – |
|
| ||||||||
| F-statistic (excluded IVs) | – | – | – | – | 28.676 | 11.050 | 1037.908 | 1037.175 |
| Hansen J test (p-value) | – | – | – | – | 0.219 | 0.114 | 0.378 | 0.372 |
| Hausman test (p-value) | – | – | – | – | 0.337 | 0.721 | 0.000 | 0.000 |
|
| ||||||||
| p-value (test: | – | – | – | – | – | – | 0.502 | 0.519 |
***, **, *. Robust standard errors, which are clustered at the individual level, are reported in parentheses. “OLS”, “FD”, “FDIV”, “AB” refer to (pooled) ordinary least squares, first difference, first difference IV, Arellano Bond estimators, respectively. See Table 13 (electronic supplementary materials) for more details on OLS and FD estimates. See Tables 14 and 15 (electronic supplementary materials) for more details on FDIV and AB estimates, respectively
Controls include age, age squared, marital status (i.e., a dummy variable equal to 1 for married persons, 0 otherwise), number of children and household size
Regressions of employment status on both non-daily and daily caregiving
| (1) | (2) | (3) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| OLS | FD | AB | |
| Dependent variable | |||
| Employment | Employment | Employment | |
| Non-daily caregiving | 0.106*** | 0.001 | |
| (0.010) | (0.007) | (0.018) | |
| Daily caregiving | |||
| (0.015) | (0.011) | (0.025) | |
| Employment | – | – | 0.509*** |
| (0.026) | |||
| Individual FE? | No | Yes | Yes |
| Wave FE? | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Controls? | All | All | All |
| Observations | 27,864 | 27,864 | 7609 |
| N (persons) | 20,952 | 20,952 | 5321 |
| Adjusted | 0.287 | 0.010 | – |
|
| |||
| F-statistic (excluded IVs) | – | – | 1037.715 |
| Hansen J test (p-value) | – | – | 0.373 |
| Hausman test (p-value) | – | – | 0.000 |
|
| |||
| p-value (test: | – | – | 0.518 |
***, **, *. Robust standard errors clustered at the individual level in parentheses. “OLS”, “FD”, “AB” refer to (pooled) ordinary least squares, first difference, and Arellano Bond estimators, respectively
Controls include age, age squared, marital status (a dummy variable equal to 1 for married persons, 0 otherwise), number of children, and household size
Regressions of work hours on both non-daily and daily caregiving
| (1) | (2) | (3) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| OLS | FD | AB | |
| Dependent variable | |||
| Work hours | Work hours | Work hours | |
| Non-daily caregiving | 3.792*** | 0.060 | |
| (0.405) | (0.291) | (0.706) | |
| Daily caregiving | |||
| (0.575) | (0.454) | (1.073) | |
| Work hours | – | – | 0.482*** |
| (0.028) | |||
| Individual FE? | No | Yes | Yes |
| Wave FE? | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Controls? | All | All | All |
| Observations | 27,618 | 27,618 | 7522 |
| N (persons) | 20,786 | 20,786 | 5270 |
| Adjusted | 0.254 | 0.011 | – |
| Test results | |||
| F-statistic (excluded IVs) | – | – | 839.400 |
| Hansen J test (p-value) | – | – | 0.897 |
| Hausman test (p-value) | – | – | 0.000 |
| Test of serial correlation of the error term: | |||
| p-value (test: | – | – | 0.027 |
***, **, *. Robust standard errors clustered at the individual level in parentheses. “OLS”, “FD”, “AB” refer to (pooled) ordinary least squares, first difference, and Arellano Bond estimators, respectively
Controls include age, age squared, marital status (a dummy variable equal to 1 for married persons, 0 otherwise), number of children, and household size
The effects of daily caregiving on paid work by gender—FD and AB (two step GMM) estimates
| (1) | (2) | (3) | (4) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| FD | FD | FD | FD | |
|
|
| |||
| Dependent variables | ||||
| Employment | Work hours | Employment | Work hours | |
|
| ||||
| Daily caregiving | ||||
| (0.019) | (0.977) | (0.013) | (0.479) | |
| Age | 0.050*** | 2.254*** | 0.040*** | 1.364** |
| (0.018) | (0.829) | (0.015) | (0.590) | |
| Age squared | ||||
| (0.0001) | (0.006) | (0.0001) | (0.004) | |
| Married | ||||
| (0.026) | (1.261) | (0.017) | (0.686) | |
| Number of children | ||||
| (0.008) | (0.299) | (0.006) | (0.217) | |
| Household size | ||||
| (0.006) | (0.277) | (0.005) | (0.192) | |
| Wave 3 | ||||
| (0.022) | (1.009) | (0.018) | (0.703) | |
| Wave 4 | ||||
| (0.022) | (0.993) | (0.018) | (0.700) | |
| Constant | ||||
| (0.024) | (1.107) | (0.020) | (0.772) | |
| Observations | 11,790 | 11,670 | 16,074 | 15,948 |
| N (persons) | 8,883 | 8,795 | 12,069 | 11,991 |
| Adjusted | 0.016 | 0.016 | 0.007 | 0.007 |
***, **, *. Robust standard errors clustered at the individual level in parentheses. The FD estimates use the “reg, cluster(ID)” command using the model in first differences. Columns 1–2 of Panel A present estimates for the effect of daily caregiving on employment and work hours for males
We use and as instruments for the lagged dependent variable ()
The effects of caregiving on paid work by geographical region—FD estimates
| (1) | (2) | (3) | (4) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dependent variables | ||||
| Employment | Employment | Work hours | Work hours | |
| Informal caregiving | – | – | ||
| (0.016) | (0.696) | |||
| Informal caregiving * South Europe | – | – | ||
| (0.022) | (0.987) | |||
| Informal caregiving * Eastern Europe | – | 0.386 | – | |
| (0.023) | (1.005) | |||
| Informal caregiving * Western Europe | 0.001 | – | – | |
| (0.018) | (0.771) | |||
| Daily caregiving | – | – | ||
| (0.057) | (1.836) | |||
| Daily caregiving * South Europe | – | 0.031 | – | 0.369 |
| (0.060) | (2.067) | |||
| Daily caregiving * Eastern Europe | – | 0.032 | – | 1.466 |
| (0.061) | (2.072) | |||
| Daily caregiving * Western Europe | – | 0.060 | – | 2.144 |
| (0.059) | (1.940) | |||
| Age | 0.047*** | 0.047*** | 1.912*** | 1.928*** |
| (0.011) | (0.011) | (0.488) | (0.488) | |
| Age squared | ||||
| (0.0001) | (0.0001) | (0.003) | (0.003) | |
| Married (dummy) | ||||
| (0.014) | (0.014) | (0.632) | (0.631) | |
| Number of children | ||||
| (0.005) | (0.005) | (0.181) | (0.181) | |
| Household size | ||||
| (0.004) | (0.004) | (0.163) | (0.163) | |
| Wave 3 | ||||
| (0.014) | (0.014) | (0.589) | (0.589) | |
| Wave 4 | ||||
| (0.014) | (0.014) | (0.586) | (0.585) | |
| Constant | ||||
| (0.015) | (0.018) | (0.768) | (0.768) | |
| Observations | 27,867 | 27,864 | 27,621 | 27,618 |
| N (persons) | 20,954 | 20,952 | 20,788 | 20,786 |
| Adjusted | 0.010 | 0.010 | 0.010 | 0.011 |
***, **, *. Robust standard errors clustered at the individual level in parentheses. The FD estimates use the “reg, cluster(ID)” command for the model in first differences. The baseline geographical region is Northern Europe (Sweden and Denmark)
The effects of caregiving on paid work by geographical region—AB estimates
| (1) | (2) | (3) | (4) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dependent variables | ||||
| Employment | Employment | Work hours | Work hours | |
| Employed | 0.509*** | 0.509*** | – | – |
| (0.026) | (0.026) | |||
| Work hours | – | – | 0.482*** | 0.483*** |
| (0.028) | (0.028) | |||
| Informal caregiving | – | – | ||
| (0.034) | (1.369) | |||
| Informal caregiving * South Europe | 0.007 | – | – | |
| (0.047) | (2.138) | |||
| Informal caregiving * Eastern Europe | 0.040 | – | – | |
| (0.097) | (4.736) | |||
| Informal caregiving * Western Europe | 0.033 | – | 0.055 | – |
| (0.039) | (1.584) | |||
| Daily caregiving | – | – | ||
| (0.108) | (2.962) | |||
| Daily caregiving * South Europe | – | 0.104 | – | 0.996 |
| (0.114) | (3.512) | |||
| Daily caregiving * Eastern Europe | – |
| – | |
| (0.164) | (6.649) | |||
| Daily caregiving * Western Europe | – | 0.126 | – | 3.651 |
| (0.113) | (3.277) | |||
| Age | ||||
| (0.033) | (0.033) | (1.319) | (1.319) | |
| Age squared | 0.001*** | 0.001*** | 0.043*** | 0.043*** |
| (0.000) | (0.000) | (0.008) | (0.008) | |
| Married | ||||
| (0.038) | (0.037) | (1.604) | (1.598) | |
| Number of children | ||||
| (0.012) | (0.012) | (0.431) | (0.432) | |
| Household size | 0.001 | 0.001 | 0.585 | 0.575 |
| (0.010) | (0.010) | (0.411) | (0.412) | |
| Wave 3 | 0.039 | 0.038 | 0.135 | 0.090 |
| (0.028) | (0.028) | (1.085) | (1.085) | |
| Constant | 0.183** | 0.181** | 4.008 | 3.863 |
| (0.076) | (0.076) | (2.920) | (2.920) | |
| Observations | 7609 | 7609 | 7522 | 7522 |
| N (persons) | 5321 | 5321 | 5270 | 5270 |
***, **, *. Robust standard errors clustered at the individual level in parentheses. The baseline geographical region is Northern Europe (Sweden and Denmark)
We use and as instruments for the lagged dependent variable ()