The More the
Merrier? The Effect of Family Composition on
Children's Education
Sandra E. Black, Paul J. Devereux (UCLA) and Kjell G.
Salvanes (IZA)
ABSTRACT
Among the
perceived inputs in the "production" of child quality is
family size; there is an extensive theoretical literature
that postulates a tradeoff between child quantity and
quality within a family. However, there is little causal
evidence that speaks to this theory. Our analysis is able to
overcome many limitations of the previous literature by
using a rich dataset that contains information on the entire
population of Norway over an extended period of time and
allows us to match adult children to their parents and
siblings. In addition, we use exogenous variation in family
size induced by the birth of twins to isolate causation.
Like most previous studies, we find a negative correlation
between family size and children’s educational attainment.
However, when we include indicators for birth order, the
effect of family size becomes negligible. This finding is
robust to the use of twin births as an instrument for family
size. In addition, we find that birth order has a
significant and large effect on children’s education;
children born later in the family obtain less education.
These findings suggest the need to revisit economic models
of fertility and child "production", focusing not only on
differences across families but differences within families
as well.