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Divorce Law Reform, Family Stability, and Children’s Long-Term Outcomes

Edvin Hertegård ()
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Edvin Hertegård: Swedish Institute for Social Research, Postal: SOFI, Stockholm University, SE-106 91 Stockholm, Sweden

No 1/2025, SOFI Working Papers in Labour Economics from Stockholm University, Swedish Institute for Social Research

Abstract: While divorce laws are known to influence family behavior, empirical evidence of their effects on children remains scarce. I shed more light on this by evaluating a 6-month parental reconsideration period for divorce, which was implemented during the Swedish divorce law reform of 1974. I exploit quasi-experimental policy variation and population-wide register data on 1.17 million Swedish children born 1952–1964 to evaluate the implications of family stability on children’s long-term human capital outcomes. I find that families with more years of exposure to this divorce restriction are 18.8% less likely to divorce. The children with greater exposure are also 1.8% more likely to graduate from upper secondary school and exhibit higher rates of marriage and lower rates of divorce in adulthood. The findings highlight a trade-off between parental freedom of choice related to divorce and externalities on children’s outcomes.

Keywords: divorce restriction; divorce law reform; children’s outcomes; family behavior (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: D13 I24 J12 J13 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 85 pages
Date: 2024-10-14
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