"This article examines the difference in lifetime incomes arising from parental preferences in the allocation of land inheritance and investments in schooling between sons and daughters in the rural Philippines. Sons are preferred with respect to land inheritance, receiving 0.15 additional hectares of land, while daughters are treated more favourably in schooling investments, receiving 1.5 more years of schooling. However, differences in both current and life-cycle incomes between sons and daughters are insignificant. This suggests that Filipino parents allocate intergenerational transfers to equalise incomes among their children, without sacrificing efficiency." -- Authors' AbstractPRISI; IFPRI3; MP17FCN
This paper explores statistically the implications of the shift from communal to individualized tenu...
This paper shows mutually consistent evidence to support female advantage in education and disadvant...
The Philippines has achieved a relatively high standard of education. Previous researches, most of w...
This paper examines the preferences of parents with respect to the allocation of land and investment...
This paper examines the role of the extended family on investments in children, using data from a re...
This paper examines the role of the extended family on investments in children, using data from a re...
This paper examines the role of the extended family on investments in children, using data from a re...
This study examines the implications of gender differences in wealth transfers—farmland and educatio...
For some time now researchers at IFPRI and else where have been studying how resources are allocated...
The authors of this book identify the factors affecting land inheritance and schooling across genera...
This paper uses three-generation retrospective data from the rural Philippines to examine the role o...
This paper uses three-generation retrospective data from the rural Philippines to examine the role o...
This paper explores statistically the implications of the shift from communal to individualized tenu...
...Many studies have looked at the way resources are distributed to men, women, and especially to sm...
This study investigates the factors determining children\u27s educational attainment, focusing on ge...
This paper explores statistically the implications of the shift from communal to individualized tenu...
This paper shows mutually consistent evidence to support female advantage in education and disadvant...
The Philippines has achieved a relatively high standard of education. Previous researches, most of w...
This paper examines the preferences of parents with respect to the allocation of land and investment...
This paper examines the role of the extended family on investments in children, using data from a re...
This paper examines the role of the extended family on investments in children, using data from a re...
This paper examines the role of the extended family on investments in children, using data from a re...
This study examines the implications of gender differences in wealth transfers—farmland and educatio...
For some time now researchers at IFPRI and else where have been studying how resources are allocated...
The authors of this book identify the factors affecting land inheritance and schooling across genera...
This paper uses three-generation retrospective data from the rural Philippines to examine the role o...
This paper uses three-generation retrospective data from the rural Philippines to examine the role o...
This paper explores statistically the implications of the shift from communal to individualized tenu...
...Many studies have looked at the way resources are distributed to men, women, and especially to sm...
This study investigates the factors determining children\u27s educational attainment, focusing on ge...
This paper explores statistically the implications of the shift from communal to individualized tenu...
This paper shows mutually consistent evidence to support female advantage in education and disadvant...
The Philippines has achieved a relatively high standard of education. Previous researches, most of w...