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Citation

Lee, Ming-Hsuan (2012). The One-Child Policy and Gender Equality in Education in China: Evidence from Household Data. Journal of Family and Economic Issues, 33, 41-52.

Abstract

This paper uses individual-level data from the China Health and Nutrition Survey and examines the impact of the one-child policy on gender equality in education in China. The results showed children in one-child households enjoyed significantly improved opportunities for education compared to children inside multiple-child households. The improvement for girls was larger than that of boys. In addition, we found no difference in years of schooling between only-child boys and only-child girls, whereas the gap between boys and girls inside multiple-child households remained significant. In particular, years of schooling for girls having male sibling(s) were 0.62 years lower than that of girls having female sibling(s). These findings suggest the one-child policy inadvertently contributed to greater educational gender equality in China.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10834-011-9277-9

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year Published

2012

Journal Title

Journal of Family and Economic Issues

Author(s)

Lee, Ming-Hsuan