The Power of the Family
Preprint
- 1 April 2007
- preprint
- Published by Elsevier in SSRN Electronic Journal
Abstract
The structure of family relationships influences economic behavior and attitudes. We define our measure of family ties using individual responses from the World Value Survey regarding the role of the family and the love and respect that children need to have for their parents for over 70 countries. We show that strong family ties imply more reliance on the family as an economic unit which provides goods and services and less on the market and on the government for social insurance. With strong family ties home production is higher, labor force participation of women and youngsters, and geographical mobility, lower. Families are larger (higher fertility and higher family size) with strong family ties, which is consistent with the idea of the family as an important economic unit. We present evidence on cross country regressions. To assess causality we look at the behavior of second generation immigrants in the US and we employ a variable based on the grammatical rule of pronoun drop as an instrument for family ties. Our results overall indicate a significant influence of the strength of family ties on economic outcomes.Keywords
This publication has 32 references indexed in Scilit:
- Culture and Institutions: Economic Development in the Regions of EuropeJournal of the European Economic Association, 2010
- Living Arrangements in Western Europe: Does Cultural Origin Matter?Journal of the European Economic Association, 2007
- Does Culture Affect Economic Outcomes?Journal of Economic Perspectives, 2006
- Living Arrangements in Western Europe: Does Cultural Origin Matter?SSRN Electronic Journal, 2006
- Kin Groups and Reciprocity: A Model of Credit Transactions in GhanaAmerican Economic Review, 2003
- Who trusts others?Journal of Public Economics, 2002
- Culture Rules: The Foundations of the Rule of Law and Other Norms of GovernanceSSRN Electronic Journal, 2002
- Modernization, Cultural Change, and the Persistence of Traditional ValuesAmerican Sociological Review, 2000
- Does Social Capital Have an Economic Payoff? A Cross-Country InvestigationThe Quarterly Journal of Economics, 1997
- Language and World ViewAnnual Review of Anthropology, 1992