This paper examines the impact of parental investments on the development of cognitive, mental and emotional skills during childhood using data from a longitudinal study, the Mannheim Study of Children at Risk, starting at birth. Our work offers three important innovations. First, we use reliable measures of the child’s cognitive, mental and emotional skills as well as accurate measures of parental investment. Second, we estimate latent factor models to account for unobserved characteristics of children. Third, we examine the skill development for girls and boys separately, as well as for children who were born with either organic or psychosocial risk. We find a decreasing impact of parental investments on cognitive and mental skills, while...
Papers in this Special Issue and elsewhere consistently find a strong relationship between children’...
This paper studies intergenerational transmission of cognitive abilities from parents to children, h...
In this study, we use the UK Millennium Cohort Study to estimate a dynamic factor model of child dev...
This paper examines the impact of parental investments on the development of cognitive, mental and e...
This study investigates the importance of different socio-economic conditions on skill formation by ...
This paper investigates the development of basic cognitive, motor and noncognitive abilities from in...
Building on recent advances in the literature and using a rich data set for two cohorts of children ...
Building on recent advances in the literature and using a rich data set for two cohorts of children ...
Building on recent advances in the literature and using a rich data set for two cohorts of children ...
none3While a large literature has focused on the impact of parental investments on child cognitive d...
Many theories in the social sciences assume that parenting affects child development. Previous resea...
While a large literature has focused on the impact of parental investments on child cognitive develo...
Reciprocal associations among measures of family resources, parenting quality, and child cognitive p...
Building on recent advances in the literature and using a rich data set for two cohorts of children ...
Reciprocal associations among measures of family resources, parenting quality, and child cognitive p...
Papers in this Special Issue and elsewhere consistently find a strong relationship between children’...
This paper studies intergenerational transmission of cognitive abilities from parents to children, h...
In this study, we use the UK Millennium Cohort Study to estimate a dynamic factor model of child dev...
This paper examines the impact of parental investments on the development of cognitive, mental and e...
This study investigates the importance of different socio-economic conditions on skill formation by ...
This paper investigates the development of basic cognitive, motor and noncognitive abilities from in...
Building on recent advances in the literature and using a rich data set for two cohorts of children ...
Building on recent advances in the literature and using a rich data set for two cohorts of children ...
Building on recent advances in the literature and using a rich data set for two cohorts of children ...
none3While a large literature has focused on the impact of parental investments on child cognitive d...
Many theories in the social sciences assume that parenting affects child development. Previous resea...
While a large literature has focused on the impact of parental investments on child cognitive develo...
Reciprocal associations among measures of family resources, parenting quality, and child cognitive p...
Building on recent advances in the literature and using a rich data set for two cohorts of children ...
Reciprocal associations among measures of family resources, parenting quality, and child cognitive p...
Papers in this Special Issue and elsewhere consistently find a strong relationship between children’...
This paper studies intergenerational transmission of cognitive abilities from parents to children, h...
In this study, we use the UK Millennium Cohort Study to estimate a dynamic factor model of child dev...