We estimate the association between parental housing wealth and children's marriage prospects in China by drawing data from the China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Survey (CHARLS). We focus on children aged 16-35 who were unmarried in 2011 and track their marriage outcomes in 2015. Our results show that parental housing wealth acts as a signal for males in the Chinese marriage market, which is characterized by a strongly unbalanced sex ratio. Males are more likely to get married if their parents own high-value houses, especially among rural households. The relationship is not significant for females
BACKGROUND Studies on children and divorce in China find a negative association between the number o...
This paper examines the impact of family size on household saving. We first study a theoretical life...
This paper uses the 2011 China Household Finance Survey data to estimate the effect of change in hou...
We estimate the association between parental housing wealth and children’s marriage prospects in Chi...
This is the first econometric study of the impact of housing property rights on family fertility in ...
This paper studies how individuals, particularly low-income individuals, have financed housing purch...
Journal ArticleSoaring homeownership and housing prices have made it more difficult for newcomers to...
With China’s gender imbalance and increasingly severe male marriage squeeze, pat-terns of intergener...
This thesis contains three studies that provide theoretical and empirical evidence on household deci...
Background: Studies on children and divorce in China find a negative association between the number ...
Background: Studies on children and divorce in China find a negative association between the number ...
In this paper, we explore the implications of home ownership as a status good for housing prices. Mo...
This paper examines the impact of family size on household saving. We first study a theoretical life...
Family changes in China are characterized by a dual rise in marital disruption and remarriage. Howev...
In this paper we document the fertility policies for remarried couples in the People\u27s Republic o...
BACKGROUND Studies on children and divorce in China find a negative association between the number o...
This paper examines the impact of family size on household saving. We first study a theoretical life...
This paper uses the 2011 China Household Finance Survey data to estimate the effect of change in hou...
We estimate the association between parental housing wealth and children’s marriage prospects in Chi...
This is the first econometric study of the impact of housing property rights on family fertility in ...
This paper studies how individuals, particularly low-income individuals, have financed housing purch...
Journal ArticleSoaring homeownership and housing prices have made it more difficult for newcomers to...
With China’s gender imbalance and increasingly severe male marriage squeeze, pat-terns of intergener...
This thesis contains three studies that provide theoretical and empirical evidence on household deci...
Background: Studies on children and divorce in China find a negative association between the number ...
Background: Studies on children and divorce in China find a negative association between the number ...
In this paper, we explore the implications of home ownership as a status good for housing prices. Mo...
This paper examines the impact of family size on household saving. We first study a theoretical life...
Family changes in China are characterized by a dual rise in marital disruption and remarriage. Howev...
In this paper we document the fertility policies for remarried couples in the People\u27s Republic o...
BACKGROUND Studies on children and divorce in China find a negative association between the number o...
This paper examines the impact of family size on household saving. We first study a theoretical life...
This paper uses the 2011 China Household Finance Survey data to estimate the effect of change in hou...