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Replication Data for: Childhood Environment and Gender Gaps in Adulthood

Harvard Dataverse (Africa Rice Center, Bioversity International, CCAFS, CIAT, IFPRI, IRRI and WorldFish)

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Title Replication Data for: Childhood Environment and Gender Gaps in Adulthood
 
Identifier https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/UM5S3X
 
Creator Chetty, Raj
Hendren, Nathaniel
Lin, Frina
Majerovitz, Jeremy
Scuderi, Benjamin
 
Publisher Harvard Dataverse
 
Description

This dataset contains replication files for "Childhood Environment and Gender Gaps in Adulthood" by Raj Chetty, Nathaniel Hendren, Frina Lin, Jeremy Majerovitz, and Benjamin Scuderi. For more information, see https://opportunityinsights.org/paper/gendergaps/.
A summary of the related publication follows.



We show that differences in childhood environments play an important role in shaping gender gaps in adulthood by documenting three facts using population tax records for children born in the 1980s.


First, gender gaps in employment rates, earnings, and college attendance vary substantially across the parental income distribution. Notably, the traditional gender gap in employment rates is reversed for children growing up in poor families: boys in families in the bottom quintile of the income distribution are less likely to work than girls.


Second, these gender gaps vary substantially across counties and commuting zones in which children grow up. The degree of variation in outcomes across places is largest for boys growing up in poor, single-parent families.


Third, the spatial variation in gender gaps is highly correlated with proxies for neighborhood disadvantage. Low-income boys who grow up in high-poverty, high-minority areas work significantly less than girls. These areas also have higher rates of crime, suggesting that boys growing up in concentrated poverty substitute from formal employment to crime.


Together, these findings demonstrate that gender gaps in adulthood have roots in childhood, perhaps because childhood disadvantage is especially harmful for boys.


 
Subject Social Sciences
 
Contributor Miller, Jared