This paper analyses the effect of child labor on household labor supply using 1920 US Census micro data. The aim of the analysis is to understand who in the household benefits from child labor. In order to identify a source of exogenous variation in child labor I use State-specific child labor laws. I find that a rise in the proportion of working children by household is associated with no variation in parents¿ labor supply. I also find a strong negative externality among children: as the proportion of working children by household rises, everything else equal, the probability that each child works falls while the probability that he attends school rises. This suggests that parents redistribute entirely the returns from child labor to the c...
ABSTRACT. Between 1880 and 1930, the employment rate of children ages 10 to 15 decreased by over 75 ...
This study explains why children work in developing countries by reviewing theoretical research on c...
This paper builds an overlapping generations household economy model where child labour is present. ...
This paper analyses the effect of child labor on household labor supply using 1920 US Census micro d...
This paper exploits the variation in the legal minimum working age across states in 1920 America in ...
How did industrialization in the nineteenth century affect the well-being of children among American...
Parsons and Goldin (in Econ Inq 637–659, 1989) use the US Commissioner of Labor Survey of (1890) to ...
In the presence of two-sided altruism, i.e., when parents and children care about each other's utili...
In both pre-industrial societies and in contemporary developing economies, it is com-mon to find; (a...
Using country-level data, this report lays out the broad stylized facts regarding the relationship b...
Using the US Commissioner of Labor Survey of 1890, we examine household decisions and parental altru...
We develop a positive theory of the adoption of child labor laws. Workers who compete with children ...
We argue from an empirical analysis of Latin-American household surveys that per capita income in th...
In order to understand what motivates parents to send their children to work, I apply a collective ...
Thispaper provides empirical evidence on the joint determinants of child labor, and child schooling,...
ABSTRACT. Between 1880 and 1930, the employment rate of children ages 10 to 15 decreased by over 75 ...
This study explains why children work in developing countries by reviewing theoretical research on c...
This paper builds an overlapping generations household economy model where child labour is present. ...
This paper analyses the effect of child labor on household labor supply using 1920 US Census micro d...
This paper exploits the variation in the legal minimum working age across states in 1920 America in ...
How did industrialization in the nineteenth century affect the well-being of children among American...
Parsons and Goldin (in Econ Inq 637–659, 1989) use the US Commissioner of Labor Survey of (1890) to ...
In the presence of two-sided altruism, i.e., when parents and children care about each other's utili...
In both pre-industrial societies and in contemporary developing economies, it is com-mon to find; (a...
Using country-level data, this report lays out the broad stylized facts regarding the relationship b...
Using the US Commissioner of Labor Survey of 1890, we examine household decisions and parental altru...
We develop a positive theory of the adoption of child labor laws. Workers who compete with children ...
We argue from an empirical analysis of Latin-American household surveys that per capita income in th...
In order to understand what motivates parents to send their children to work, I apply a collective ...
Thispaper provides empirical evidence on the joint determinants of child labor, and child schooling,...
ABSTRACT. Between 1880 and 1930, the employment rate of children ages 10 to 15 decreased by over 75 ...
This study explains why children work in developing countries by reviewing theoretical research on c...
This paper builds an overlapping generations household economy model where child labour is present. ...