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Maternal Work and Children’s Development: Examining 20 Years of Evidence

Maria Lo Bue, Elizaveta Perova and Sarah Reynolds

No 10305, Policy Research Working Paper Series from The World Bank

Abstract: Maternal work may affect children positively through increased household income, higher control of mothers over available income, and expansion of maternal information networks through work contacts and greater decision-making power of mothers as they become more economically empowered. However, maternal work may reduce maternal time spent with children. If maternal time is not substituted for time of equal quality by other caregivers, children’s development may be penalized. Stress associated with work may also decrease the quality of parenting. This review summarizes causal evidence on the relationship between maternal work and children’s development. The majority causal studies find positive or 0 impacts of maternal work on children’s development.

Date: 2023-02-14
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-hea
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