Search Results

SORT BY: PREVIOUS / NEXT
Keywords:parents OR Parents 

Journal Article
Passing Along Housing Wealth from Parents to Children

Young adults are more likely to own a home if their parents are homeowners than if their parents are renters. New research reveals how parents owning a home can lead to an increase in the persistence in homeownership across generations. Specifically, homeowner parents are often able to extract the equity value from their home to help their children purchase a home. This “dynastic” home equity enables children of homeowner parents who extract equity to accumulate approximately one third more housing wealth by age 30 than children of renters.
FRBSF Economic Letter , Volume 2022 , Issue 32 , Pages 6

Journal Article
Following in the Family Footsteps

Historically, the phenomenon of children entering their parents' careers ? following in their parents' footsteps ? was perceived as a social ill. It was a sign that the children were trapped by barriers keeping them out of other occupations and relegating them to reliving the work lives of their parents.
Econ Focus , Issue 4Q , Pages 15-17

Are Parents’ Labor Participation Rates Returning to Pre-Pandemic Levels?

In 2022, the labor force participation rate for mothers with young children exceeded its 2019 level. The rate for fathers with young children hasn’t fully recovered.
On the Economy

Working Paper
Parental Proximity and Earnings After Job Displacements

The earnings of young adults who live in the same neighborhoods as their parents completely recover after a job displacement, unlike the earnings of young adults who live farther away, which permanently decline. Nearby workers appear to benefit from help with childcare since grandmothers are less likely to be employed after their child's job displacement and since the earnings benefits are concentrated among young adults who have children. The result also suggests that parental employment networks improve earnings. Differences in job search durations, transfers of housing services, and ...
Finance and Economics Discussion Series , Paper 2019-062

Working Paper
Parental Proximity and Earnings after Job Displacements

Young adults, ages 25 to 35, who live in the same neighborhoods as their parents experience stronger earnings recoveries after a job displacement than those who live farther away. This result is driven by smaller on-impact wage reductions and sharper recoveries in both hours and wages. We show that geographic mobility, different job search durations, housing transfers, and ex-ante differences between individuals are unlikely explanations. Our findings are consistent with a framework in which some individuals living near their parents face a better wage-offer distribution, though we find no ...
Working Papers (Old Series) , Paper 1722

FILTER BY year

FILTER BY Content Type

FILTER BY Author

FILTER BY Jel Classification

J61 2 items

J64 2 items

R23 2 items

FILTER BY Keywords

parents 5 items

Adult children 2 items

Job loss 2 items

Transfers 2 items

COVID-19 1 items

Childcare 1 items

show more (14)

PREVIOUS / NEXT