open access publication

Preprint, 2024

Public and Parental Investments, and Children's Skill Formation

SSRN Electronic Journal, ISSN 1556-5068, 10.2139/ssrn.4813452

Contributors

Gensowski, Miriam 0000-0003-4512-6224 [1] Landersø, Rasmus Kløve [1] Dale, Philip S 0000-0002-7697-8510 [2] Højen, Anders 0000-0003-2923-5084 [3] Justice, Laura M [4] Bleses, Dorthe 0000-0003-1670-4742 [3]

Affiliations

  1. [1] Rockwool Foundation Research Unit
  2. [NORA names: Rockwool Foundation; Non-Profit Organisations];
  3. [2] University of New Mexico
  4. [NORA names: United States; America, North; OECD];
  5. [3] Aarhus University
  6. [NORA names: AU Aarhus University; University; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD];
  7. [4] The Ohio State University
  8. [NORA names: United States; America, North; OECD]

Abstract

This paper studies the interaction between parental and public inputs in children's skill formation. We perform a longer-run follow-up study of a randomized controlled trial that increased preschool quality and initially improved skills significantly for children of all backgrounds. There is, however, complete fade-out for children with highly educated parents. Given positive long-run effects for children with low-educated parents, the treatment reduces child skill gaps across parents' education by 46%. We show that the heterogeneous treatment effects are a result of differences in parents' responses in terms of investments, reacting to school quality later in childhood. There is also evidence of cross-productivity between reading and math skills and socio-emotional development.

Keywords

background, childhood, children, cross product, development, differences, educating parents, education, effect, evidence, follow-up study, formation, gap, heterogeneous treatment effects, improve skills, input, interaction, investment, long-run effects, low-educated parents, math, math skills, parental education, parental responsibility, parents, positive long-run effect, preschool quality, public input, quality, randomized controlled trials, reading, response, school, school quality, skill formation, skills, skills gap, socio-emotional development, study, treatment, treatment effects, trials

Data Provider: Digital Science