© 1999 - 2008
Max-Planck-Gesellschaft

Family structure and wellbeing of out-of-wedlock children
The significance of the biological parents' relationship

 

Frank Heiland
Shirley H. Liu

 
VOLUME 15 - ARTICLE 4
PAGES 61 - 104
Date Received: 1 Nov 2005
Date Published: 6 Sep 2006

http://www.demographic-research.org/volumes/vol15/4/

Bookmark this page
Send this article to a friend
   
PDF file Click the icon to view and/or download the PDF file.
Once you are in the PDF file, use your browser back button to return to this page.

Abstract
This study examines the role of the relationship between the biological parents in determining child wellbeing using longitudinal data from the Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Study (FFCWS). We extend prior research by considering children born to unmarried parents in an investigation of the effect of the relationship structure between the biological parents on infant health and behavior. The main findings are that children born to cohabiting biological parents (i) realize better outcomes, on average, than those born to mothers who are less involved with the child's biological father, and (ii) whose parents marry within a year after childbirth do not display significantly better outcomes than children of parents who continue to cohabit. Furthermore, children born to cohabiting or visiting biological parents who end their relationship within the first year of the child's life are up to 9 percent more likely to have asthma compared to children whose biological parents remain (romantically) involved. The results are robust to a rich set of controls for socioeconomic status, health endowments, home investments, and relationship characteristics.

Author's affiliation
Frank Heiland
Florida State University, United States of America
Shirley H. Liu
University of Miami, United States of America

Keywords
child asthma, cohabitation, family, fragile families, infant wellbeing, marriage

Word count (Main text)
9343

Other Articles by the same author/authors (in Demographic Research)
file[11-7] Trends in East-West German Migration from 1989 to 2002

Most recent Similar Articles (in Demographic Research)
file [19-41] Women’s changing socioeconomic position and union formation in Spain and Portugal (marriage, cohabitation)
file [16-9] Cohabitation, nonmarital childbearing, and the marriage process (family, cohabitation)
file [15-10] A gender perspective on preferences for marriage among cohabitating couples (marriage, cohabitation)
file [11-10] Estimating time-varying sex-age-specific o/e rates of marital status transitions in family household projection or simulation (marriage, family)
file [7-18] Cohabiting unions in France and West Germany: Transitions to first birth and first marriage (marriage, cohabitation)

[ Back to previous page ]