SEMINAR: Dowry, Old-Age Support and Labor Supply over the Lifecycle Seminar
Event details
Speaker: Alison Andrew (Oxford)
Abstract: Abstract: In this paper we examine how the institution of dowry and norms of old-age support in India affect labor supply, consumption, savings, the timing of children's marriages, and insurance against health shocks over the lifecycle. The ubiquity of large dowries, marital transfers from families of brides to those of grooms, and the expectation that sons provide financially for parents in old age mean that sons, in contrast to daughters, typically bring both a large one-off wealth transfer and a stream of income support to their parents. We document that men and women work at higher rates, retire later, and consume less when they have no sons. We then go on to use detailed panel data to document how choices change around the time when children get married. We find that marriages of sons correspond to a large increase in household assets, an increase in retirement rates of fathers, an increase in consumption, and an increase in labor supply of the son. Further, marriage timings appear related to health shocks experienced by the household head. Grounded in this descriptive work, we develop a dynamic lifecycle model to understand households' labor supply, consumption, savings, and marriage choices and how these are shaped by initial wealth and by shocks to wages and health.
Joint with: Anusha Guha (UCL, IFS) and Selma Walther (Sussex, IFS)
Host: Jack Britton (York)