How Do
Women's Educational Attainments Affect the Educational
Attainment of the Next Generation?
Robert D. Mare
and Vida Maralani (UCLA)
ABSTRACT
The effect of the
socioeconomic characteristics in one generation on the
socioeconomic achievement of the next generation is the
central concern of social stratification research.
Researchers typically address this issue by analyzing the
associations between the characteristics of parents and
offspring. This approach, however, focuses on observed
parent-offspring pairs and ignores that changes in the
socioeconomic characteristics of one generation may alter
the numbers and types of intergenerational family
relationships that are created in the next one. Models of
intergenerational effects that include marriage and
fertility, as well as the intergenerational transmission of
socioeconomic status, yield a richer account of
intergenerational effects at both the family and population
levels. When applied to a large sample of Indonesian women
and their families, these models show that the effects of
women’s educational attainment on the educational
attainments of the next generation are positive. However,
the beneficial effects of increases in women’s schooling on
the educational attainment of their children are partially
offset at the population level by a reduction in the overall
number of children that a more educated population of women
bears and enhanced by the more favorable marriage partners
of better educated women.