Artikel

Understanding Day Care Enrolment Gaps

We document gaps in day care enrolment by family background in a country with a universal day care system (Germany). Research demonstrates that children of parents with lower educational attainment and children of migrant parents may benefit the most from day care, making it important to understand why such enrolment gaps exist. We carry out complementary decomposition and quasi-experimental analyses making use of a unique data set that records both parental wishes for day care and actual usage. Our decomposition shows that (a) provision-related factors (local shortages and the level of parental fees) explain at least as much of the gaps as differences in parental wishes for day care, and that (b) far more of the gap by parental education is explained (79%) than of the gap by parental migrant status (22%). Our quasi-experimental designs confirm that reducing both parental fees and shortages significantly decreases the enrolment gap by parental education but not by parental migrant status. We discuss implications for policy.

Language
Englisch

Bibliographic citation
Journal: Journal of Public Economics ; ISSN: 0047-2727 ; Year: 2020 ; Issue: Forthcoming ; Amsterdam: Elsevier

Classification
Wirtschaft
Education and Inequality
Fertility; Family Planning; Child Care; Children; Youth
Subject
child care
early education
family background
decomposition
discrimination
synthetic control

Event
Geistige Schöpfung
(who)
Jessen, Jonas
Schmitz, Sophia
Waights, Sevrin
Event
Veröffentlichung
(who)
Elsevier
ZBW – Leibniz Information Centre for Economics
(where)
Amsterdam
(when)
2020

DOI
doi:10.1016/j.jpubeco.2020.104252
Handle
Last update
10.03.2025, 11:45 AM CET

Data provider

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Object type

  • Artikel

Associated

  • Jessen, Jonas
  • Schmitz, Sophia
  • Waights, Sevrin
  • Elsevier
  • ZBW – Leibniz Information Centre for Economics

Time of origin

  • 2020

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