Society of Economics of the HOusehold (SEHO) Paris 23-24 May 2018
Society of Economics of the HOusehold (SEHO) Paris 23-24 May 2018
Location: 48 Boulevard Jourdan, Paris (reachable on foot from Paris left bank; short UBER/taxi ride; metro line 4 get off at stop Porte d’Orleans; RER B get off at stop Cite Universitaire; bus 38 get off at stop Porte d’Orleans; Orlybus from Orly airport, get off at rue de la Tombe d’Issoire). SEHO survival kit
Program Program PDF
Speakers only need to bring their presentation on a key USB. Each parallel session lasts 120 minutes and each speaker is allowed 30 minutes including questions (20 minutes for presentation and 10 minutes for questions). There are no discussants.
Wednesday 23rd May
8.30 Coffee & Registration
9.00-10.30 Chair, François Bourguignon (Paris School of Economics):
_ 9.00-9.10 Daniel Cohen (Director, CEPREMAP) & Pierre Yves Geoffard (Director, PSE): Welcome of the Participants
_ 9.10-9.50 Shoshana Grossbard (San Diego State University, SEHO President ): « Economics of the household and the gender gap in economics » slides
_ 9.50-10.30 Pierre Andre Chiappori (Columbia University): « Household Economics: where do we stand? » slides
10.30-11.00 Coffee break
11.00-13.00 Parallel sessions A: Debt and Consumption, Health, Marriage Matching, Labor, Culture
13.00-14.00 Buffet Lunch
14.00-16.00 Parallel Sessions B: Retirement, Health, Education & Children Outcomes, Marriage, Savings & Consumption
16.00 Coffee Break
16.30-18.30 Parallel Sessions C: Savings, Gender Norms & Labor, Marriage & Divorce, Children, Household Health
20.00 Conference Dinner
Thursday 24th May
8.30 Welcome Coffee
8.40-10.00 Chair, Daniele Paserman (Boston University):
_8.40-9.20 Lee Badgett (University of Massachussets, Amherst): « Making the Economics of the Family Matter: Lessons from the Marriage Equality Debate » slides
_9.20-10.00 Raquel Fernandez (New York University): « Cultural Change »
10.00 Coffee Break
10.30-12.30 Parallel sessions D: Assets & Consumption, Household Interactions, Children & Health, Fertility, Labor & Migration, Education & Expenditure
12.30-13.30 Buffet Lunch
13.30-15.30 Parallel Sessions E: Health & Power, Labor & Education, Intrahousehold Inequality, Time Use & Children, Household Decisions, Financial Decisions
15.30 Coffee Break
15.45-17.45 Parallel Sessions F: Savings & Welfare, Marriage, Labor, Children & Parents, Household Production & Food Insecurity
18.00-18.30 SEHO members assembly
Wednesday 23rd May, 11.00-13.00 Sessions A: Debt and Consumption, Health, Marriage Matching, Labor, Culture
Each parallel session will last 120 minutes and include 4 papers; each paper will be given 30 minutes including the paper presentation and questions from the floor.
Wed. 11.00-13.00 Debt & Consumption A, Chair: Charles Yuji Horioka (Asian Growth Research Institute & Osaka University):
_Wilbert van der Klaauw (Federal Reserve Bank New York), Zachary Bleemer, Meta Brown, Donghoon Lee, âDebt, Jobs, or Housing: Whatâs Keeping Millennials at Home?â
_Tullio Jappelli (Naples University), D. Christelis, D. Georgarakos, L. Pistaferri, M. Van Roij, « Asymmetric Consumption Effects of Transitory Income Shocks »
_Ran Sun Lyng (Aarhus University), âThe Impact of the Financial Crisis on Homeownersâ Portfolio Choiceâ
_Cliff A Robb (University of Wisconsin â Madison), Sam Schreiber, âThe Role of Student Loan Debt in Homeownership Decisionsâ
Wed. 11.00-13.00 Health A, Chair: Karen S. Conway (University of New Hampshire):
_ Hope Corman (Rider University & NBER), Dhaval Dave, Ariel Kalil, Ofira Schwartz-Soicher, Nancy E. Reichman, âEffects of Welfare Reform on Youth Social Behaviorâ
_ Brad R. Humphreys (West Virginia University), Jane E. Ruseski, Li Zhou ,â Understanding the Determinants of Maternal Smoking in Appalachiaâ
_ Andrea Menclova (University of Canterbury, Business and Law), Karen S. Conway, âYouâll Never Walk Alone â the Effects of Walkability on Pregnancy Behaviorsâ
_ Dhaval Dave (Bentley University & NBER), Monica Deza, Anca Grecu, Henry Saffer, âPrenatal Opioid Abuse and Infant Health: Effects of Mandatory Access Prescription Drug Monitoring Programsâ
Wed. 11.00-13.00 Marriage Matching A, Chair: David Ong (Peking University, HSBC Business School)
_Eugene Choo (Yale-NUS College), Liang Chen, âIdentification of Counterfactuals in Marriage Matching Modelâ
_Joe Price (Brigham Young University), âMismatches in the Marriage Marketâ
_Bram De Rock (ECARES, UniversitĂ© Libre de Bruxelles), Laurens Cherchye, Frederic Vermeulen, âMarital Matching, Economies of Scale and Intrahousehold Allocationsâ
_Edoardo Ciscato (Sciences-Po Paris), âMarriage, Divorce and Wage Uncertainty: How Changes in the Wage Distribution Reshaped the Marriage Marketâ
Wed. 11.00-13.00 Labor A, Chair: David Margolis (Paris School of Economics)
_Yolanda Pena-Boquete (Institute for Studies on Mediterranean Societies, Naples), Ronald L. Oaxaca, âA Different Approach to Quantile Wage Decompositions with an Application to Gender Wage Gaps in the U.K. and the U.S.â
_ Karen Mumford (University of York), Antonia Parera-Nicolau, Yolanda Pena-Boquete, âLabour Supply and Childcare in Two-Parent Families: A Structural Approachâ
_ Dominique Meurs (University Paris Ouest Nanterre La DĂ©fense), Claudio Lucifora, Elena Villar, âChildren, Earnings and Careers in an Internal Labor Market. An Event Studyâ
_Eva Sierminska (LISER Luxembourg), Ronald L. Oaxaca, âSpecialization in Economics: A gender story?â
Wed. 11.00-13.00 Culture A, Chair: Eleonora Patacchini (Cornell University)
_Stefania Marcassa (THEMA, UniversitĂ© de Cergy-Pontoise), Alessandra Fogli, âThe Geography of Social Changeâ
_ Simone Moriconi (IĂ©seg School of Management, La DĂ©fense), âCountry-specific preferences and employment rates in Europeâ
_Eva Markowsky (UniversitĂ€t Hamburg), Miriam Beblo and Luise Görges , âCulture at work? Moving the epidemiological approach to contemporary Europeâ
_ Lina AldĂ©n (Linnaeus University), Emma Neuman, âCulture and the gender gap in major: An analysis using sibling comparisonsâ
Wednesday 23rd May 14.00-16.00
Parallel Sessions B: Retirement, Health, Education & Children Outcomes, Marriage, Savings & Consumption
Each parallel session will last 120 minutes and include 4 papers; each paper will be given 30 minutes including the paper presentation and questions from the floor.
Wed. 14.00-16.00 Retirement B, Chair: André Masson (Paris School of Economics)
_Ainhoa Aparicio (Collegio Carlo Alberto, Turin), âThe uneven impact of women’s retirement on their daughters’ employment: Southern European vs other European countriesâ
_ Arthur van Soest (Tilburg University), Pierre-Carl Michaud, Luc Bissonnette, âRetirement of Couples: A Stated Preferences Analysisâ
_ Matilde Pinto Machado (Universidad Carlos III de Madrid), InĂ©s Berniell., Dolores De la Mata, âThe Impact of a Permanent Income Shock on the Situation of Women in the Household: the case of a pension reform in Argentinaâ
_ Bernt Bratsberg (Frish Center & Oslo University), Elena Stancanelli, âPartial retirement and partnersâ hours of work: Learning from a Norwegian retirement reformâ
Wed. 14.00-16.00 Health B, Chair: Benedicte Apouey (Paris School of Economics)
_ Titus Galama (University of Southern California, Center for Economic and Social Research), âGene-by-SES interplay in health behavior: theory and empiricsâ
_ Bhash Mazumder (Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago), âIntergenerational Health Mobility in the USâ
_ Blunch, Niels-Hugo (Washington and Lee University), Nabanita Datta Gupta, âMothersâ Health Knowledge for Children with Diarrhoea: Who You Are or Who You Know?â
_ Hamid R. Oskorouchi (University of Hohenheim), âLess is Too Much: Afghan Child Health and In Utero Exposure to Conflictâ
Wed. 14.00-16.00 Education & Children outcomes B, Chair: Julien Grenet (Paris School of Economics)
_ Mariana Zerpa (University of Leuven), âPreschool Education and Child Development and Health: Evidence from State Pre-K Programsâ
_Marco Bertoni (Padoa University), Giorgio Brunello, Lorenzo Cappellari, âParents, Siblings and Schoolmates. The Effects of Family-School Interactions on Educational Achievement and Long-term Labor Market Outcomesâ
_ Valdemar Neto (Fundação GetĂșlio Vargas, Brazil), âYouth Responses to Cash Transfers: Evidence from Brazilâ
_Ralitza Dimova (Global Development Institute, University of Manchester), âParental risk preferences, women’s bargaining power and educational outcomes of children: Lab-in-the-field evidence from rural CĂŽte d’Ivoireâ
Wed. 14.00-16.00 Marriage B, Chair: Joe Price (Brigham Young University),
_David Ong (Peking University, HSBC Business School), âHard to get: The scarcity of women and the competition for high-income men in urban Chinaâ
_ Ho-Po Crystal Wong (National Tsing Hua University, Taiwan), âCanât Wait Any Longer? The Length of Separation Periods and Remarriage
_ Mizuki Komura (Musashi University, Japan), âConsequences of War: Japanese Demographic Transition and the Marriage Marketâ
_ Todd Sorensen (University of Nevada), Adriana HernĂĄndez Castañeda, âChanges in Immigrant Marriage Patterns: The Role of Sex-Ratios and Immigration Policiesâ
Wed. 14.00-16.00 Savings & Consumption B, Chair: Viola Angelini (Groningen University,
__Sergio Perelman (HEC University of Liege and CREPP), Mathieu Lefebvre, âPublic pension wealth and household asset holdings: new evidence from Belgiumâ
_Konstantinos Tatsiramos (University of Luxembourg and LISER), âMonetary Policy Transmission to Consumer Sentiment and Durable Consumptionâ
_Jiyuan Wang (University of Groningen), R.J.M. Alessie, V. Angelini, âThe Under-Investment of Human Capital and Old-Age Transfers: The Role of Two-Sided Altruism, Liquidity Constraints and Fixed Costs
_Christine Ho (Singapore Management University), âGender-Based Parental Investments and Intergenerational Supportâ
Wednesday 23rd May 16.30-18.30
Parallel Sessions C: Savings, Gender Norms & Labor, Marriage & Divorce, Children, Households & Health
Each parallel session will last 120 minutes and include 4 papers; each paper will be given 30 minutes including the paper presentation and questions from the floor.
Wed. 16.30-18.30 Savings C, Chair: Luc Arrondel (Paris School of Economics)
_Charles Yuji Horioka (Asian Growth Research Institute and Osaka University), Luigi Ventura, âThe Saving Behavior of the Elderly in Italyâ
_Marianna Brunetti (University of Rome Tor Vergata), âTill Mortgage Do Us Part: Refinancing Costs and Householdâs Bank Switchingâ
_David C Ribar (Melbourne Institute: Applied Economic and Social Research), Carole Comerton-Forde, Edwin Ip, James Ross, Nicolas Salamanca and Sam Tsiaplias, âUsing Survey and Banking Data to Measure Financial Wellbeingâ
_Jacques Silber (Bar-Ilan University, Israel), Eva Sierminska, âHouseholds and the diversity of assets holdings in the United States in 2007 and 2009â
Wed. 16.30-18.30 Gender Norms & Labor C, Chair Libertad Gonzales (Universitat Pompeu Fabra & GSE)
_Hanna Swahnberg (Linnaeus University, Sweden), Lina AldĂ©n, Mats Hammarstedt, â(I canât get no) job satisfaction? Differences by sexual orientation in Swedenâ
_ Sarah Rosenberg (UniversitĂ© Libre de Bruxelles), âDo Couples Commit to Gender Norms? The Effect of Relative Wages on Labor Supplyâ
_Eiji Yamamura (Seinan University, Japan), Yoshiro Tsutsui, âSpousal gaps in educational attainment, age, and height and their impact on the allocation of houseworkâ
_Elisabeth Cudeville (Centre dâEconomie de la Sorbonne, Paris 1 PanthĂ©on-Sorbonne), Catherine Sofer, Martine Gross, « Measuring Gender Norms in Domestic Work : A Comparison between Homosexual and Heterosexual Couples »
Wed. 16.30-18.30 Marriage & Divorce C, Chair: Sylvie Lambert (Paris School of Economics)
_ClĂ©mentine Sadania (Aix-Marseille School of Economics), âEmpowerment at Marriage: International Migration and the Egyptian Marriage Marketâ
_Manuel Alejandro Estefan (Institute for Fiscal Studies), âMale-Female Earnings Inequality and Divorce Rates: Evidence from Mexicoâ
_Alena Bicakova (CERGE-EI, Charles University Prague and the Czech Academy of Sciences), Stepan Jurajda, âField-of-Study Homogamyâ
_ Christine Luecke (Otto von Guericke University Magdeburg, Germany), âUnlucky at Work, Unlucky in Love: The Long-Term Effects of Job Loss on Marital Stabilityâ
Wed. 16.30-18.30 Children C, Chair: Karen Mumford (University of York)
_Wei Fan (Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh), âReinforcement or Compensation? Heterogeneous Parental Responses to Children’s Revealed Human Capital Levels in Ethiopiaâ
_Nadia Campaniello (University of Essex), âParental love is not blindâ
_Valerie A. Ramey (University of California San Diego), âTime Investment in Children by Extended Familiesâ
_ Cinzia Di Novi (University of Pavia Italy), âSmoking Epidemic Across Generations, Gender and Educational Groups: A Matter of Diffusion of Innovationsâ
Wed. 16.30-18.30 Households & Health C, Chair: Olivier Donni (Université Cergy Pontoise)
_Enrica Croda (Ca’ Foscari University of Venice), Jonathan Skinner, Laura Yasaitis, âThe Health of Disability Insurance Enrollees: An International Comparisonâ
_Raphael Cottin (PSL, UniversitĂ© Paris Dauphine), Teto Abdelkader, âIs âfreeâ healthcare enough to insure consumption against illness? Evidence from a targeted hospital fee waiver in Moroccoâ
_Elodie DjemaĂŻ (UniversitĂ© Paris-Dauphine), âMothers and Fathers: co-residence, education and child healthâ
_ Akito Kamei (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign), âThe Impact of Rainfall on Women/Child Agricultural and Domestic Labor Supply, Climate and Child Labor using Ugandan Panel Data 2009-2012â
Thursday 24th May, 10.30-12.30
Parallel sessions D: Assets & Consumption, Household Interactions, Children & Health, Fertility, Labor & Migration, Education & Expenditure
Each parallel session will last 120 minutes and include 4 papers; each paper will be given 30 minutes including the paper presentation and questions from the floor.
Thu. 10.30-12.30 Assets & Consumption D, Chair: Charles Yuji Horioka (Asian Growth Research Institute & Osaka University)
_Jeanne Lafortune (Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile) , Corinne Low, âBetting the House: How Assets Influence Marriage Selection, Marital Stability, and Child Investmentsâ
_Laura M. Argys (University of Colorado), Andrew I. Friedson, , M. Melinda Pitts, âDebt, Death and Business Cyclesâ
_Denni Tommasi (UniversitĂš libre de Bruxelles, ECARES), âControl of Resources and Demand for Foodâ
_Luca Piccoli (University of Balearic Islands), âPersonality Traits and Household Consumption Choicesâ
Thu. 10.30-12.30 Household interactions D, Chair: Laurens Cherchye (University of Leuven)
_ Xinzheng Shi (School of Economics and Management, Tsinghua University, Beijing, China), âAre spousal labor supplies substitutes? Evidence from the workweek reduction policy in Chinaâ
_ Miki Kohara (Osaka University), âDoes a husbandâs job-loss damage the wifeâs health?â
_ Lucia Mangiavacchi (University of the Balearic Islands), Shoshana Grossbard, William Nilsson and Luca Piccoli, âSpousal Income Association, Family Composition and Inequality: a Simulation Approachâ
_Nabanita Datta Gupta (Aarhus University), âEmployment Adjustments Around Childbirth: Gender and Family-Related Differencesâ
Thu. 10.30-12.30 Children & Health D, Chair: Hope Corman (Rider University & NBER)
_Tom Robinson (Newcastle University, UK), âMaternal Labour Market Characteristics and Adolescent Risky Health Behavioursâ
_Anna Sanz-de-Galdeano (University of Alicante), Nuria Rodriguez-Planas, Anastasia Terskaya, âGender Norms and the Gender Gap in Teenagers’ Risky Behaviors and Later-Life Outcomes: Evidence for the USâ
_Romina Tome (Sanford School of Public Policy, Duke University), âCurtailing Access to Alcohol: Evidence on the Impact over Child Outcomes in Brazilâ
_Malte Sandner (Institute for Employment Research, IAB), âThe Effects of Universal Public Childcare Provision on Cases of Child Neglect and Abuseâ
Thu. 10.30-12.30 Fertility D, Chair: Valerie Ramey (University of California, San Diego)
_Chiara Orsini (LSE Department of Health Policy and Department of Social Policy), âGirls and Boys: Economic Crisis, Fertility, and Birth Outcomesâ
_Libertad Gonzales (Universitat Pompeu Fabra and Barcelona GSE), âThe Effects of Paternity Leave on Fertility and Labor Market Outcomesâ
_Holger Stichnoth (ZEW Mannheim), Hans-Martin von Gaudecker, Tim Obermeier, âWomen’s Careers and Fertility Behaviorâ
_Kasey Buckles (University of Notre Dame), âIs Fertility a Leading Economic Indicator?â
Thu. 10.30-12.30 Labor & Migration D, Chair: Bert Bratsberg (Frisch Center, Oslo)
_Almudena Sevilla (Queen Mary University of London), âLabor Market Impacts of Granting Access to Driving Licenses to Undocumented Immigrantsâ
_Rune Vammen Lesner (Aarhus University), âLife Skills Development through a Spare-Time Jobâ
_Joseph J. Sabia (San Diego State University, âDo Minimum Wages Help or Hurt Low-Skilled Immigrantsâ
_ Mariapia Mendola (University of Milano-Bicocca ), âFamily Size, Sibling Rivalry and Migration: Evidence from Mexicoâ
Thu. 10.30-12.30 Education & Household Expenditure D, Chair: David C Ribar (Melbourne Institute: Applied Economic and Social Research),
_Colin Cannonier (Jack C. Massey College of Business, Belmont University), Monica Galloway Burke, âThe Impact of Education on Household Decision Making Among Women in Sierra Leoneâ
_Daniela Vidart (University of California, San Diego), âFertility, Human Capital and the Short and Long Term Effects of Electrificationâ
_Liz Ignowski (KU Leuven, LICOS Centre for Institutions and Economic Performance), âIntra-household Expenditures and Transfers: Evidence From a Choice Experiment in Rural Tanzaniaâ
_Kusum Mundra (Rutgers University, Newark) « Lifetime Labor Market Relative Intermittency Gap and its Effect on Gender Wage Gap »
Thursday 24th May, 13.30-15.30
Parallel sessions E: Health & Power, Labor, Intrahousehold Inequality, Time Use & Children, Household Decisions, Financial Decisions
Each parallel session will last 120 minutes and include 4 papers; each paper will be given 30 minutes including the paper presentation and questions from the floor.
Thu. 13.30-15.30 Health & Power E, Chair: Nabanita Datta Gupta (Aarhus University),
_Rachel Cassidy (Institute for Fiscal Studies), âThe power to protect: household bargaining and female condom useâ
_ Rossella Calvi (Rice University Economics Department), Arthur Lewbel and Denni Tommasi, âWomenâs Empowerment and Family Health: Estimating LATE with Mismeasured Treatmentâ
_ Sarah Grace Cheng See (University of York), âJuggling Work and Family: The Effect of Flexibility on Mental Healthâ
_ Gigi Foster (University of New South Wales), Leslie Stratton, âIs there a gender power paradox within the household? A replication and extension of Bertrand, Kamenica, and Pan (2015) for the US and Australiaâ
Thu. 13.30-15.30 Labor & Education E, Chair: Ryuichi Tanaka (Institute of Social Science, The University of Tokyo)
_ Yeseul Hyun (Boston University), âGender Role Attitudes, Endogamous Marriage, and Labor Supply Patterns of Immigrant Women
_NĂșria RodrĂguez-Planas (City University of New York, Queens College), Ryuichi Tanaka, âLocal Labor Demand, Local Gender Social Norms, and Female Labor Force Supply in Japan
_Eliane El Badaoui (Nanterre University), Lucia Mangiavacchi « Fostering, Children’s Time Use and Schooling in Niger: A Test of the Cinderella Effectâ
_Hector Moreno (Paris School of Economics), âThe effect of grandparental education on their offspringâs educationâ
Thu. 13.30-15.30 Intrahousehold Inequality E, Chair: Daniele Paserman (Boston University)
_Giulia La Mattina (University of South Florida), Osea Giuntella and Climent Quintana-Domeque, âAssortative Mating, Intergenerational Transmission and Inequality: Evidence from Birth Weight using Parental Grandmother Fixed Effectsâ
_Jacob Penglase (Boston College), « Child Fostering and Intrahousehold Inequalityâ
_Katrin Huber (University of Passau, Germany), Erwin Winkler, âAll You Need is Love? Trade Shocks, Inequality, and Risk Sharing between Partnersâ
_ Eleonora Patacchini (Cornell University), Angela Cools, âOn the Sources of the Gender Earnings Gapâ
Thu. 13.30-15.30 Time Use & Children E, Chair: Claudia Senik (Paris School of Economics)
_ Elsa Fontainha (ISEG Lisbon School of Economics & Management), âParental Impact on the schooling and financial choices of young adults in the US in 2005-2013â
_ Audrey Bousselin (LISER Luxembourg), Arnaud Dupuy, âChildcare, quality and location: an hedonic approachâ
_Idriss Fontaine (THEMA, UniversitĂ© de Cergy-Pontoise), âThe causal effect of family size on mothers’ labor supply: evidence from France and its overseas regionsâ
– Alexandros Theloudis (LISER Luxembourg), âWages and Family Time Allocation »
Thu. 13.30-15.30 Household decisions E, Chair: Frederic Vermeulen (University of Leuven)
_Julien Monardo (CREST-ENS Paris-Saclay), Andre de Palma, Nathalie.Picard, Anthony Ziegelmeyer, « Decision-Making under Risk: From Individual Preferences to Couple Decisions »
_Alex Wolf (Institute for Fiscal Studies), âResource Allocation in Couples – A Collective Model with Prior Informationâ
_Nathalie Picard (THEMA, University of Cergy-Pontoise and Ecole Polytechnique), AndrĂ© de Palma, Sophie Dantan, âLeadership in mode choice decisions within couplesâ
_ J. Alberto Molina (University of Zaragoza), Jose Ignacio Gimenez Nadal, Jeorge Velilla, âIntertemporal labor supply: a household collective approachâ
Thu. 13.30-15.30 Financial decisions E, Chair: Laura M. Argys (University of Colorado)
_Mahnaz Mahdavi (Smith College in Massachusttes), Nick Horton, Rene Heavlow, « Financial Participation by Educated Women: Impact of Competency and Confidence »
_Anzelika Zaiceva (University of Modena and Reggio Emilia), « The Nativity Gap in Financial Decisions: Evidence from Italy »
_Marike Knoef (Leiden University & Netspar), Jim Been, Joost Dalhuijsen, « Early-life financial behavior, intergenerational transfers, and employment: Insights from a nudge in student loan policy »
_Anita Mukherjee (Wisconsin School of Business, University of Wisconsin-Madison) « Time and Money: Social Security Benefits and Intergenerational Transfers »
Thu. 15.45-17.45 Parallel Sessions F: Savings & Welfare, Marriage, Labor Children & Parents, Household Production & Food Insecurity
Each parallel session will last 120 minutes and include 4 papers; each paper will be given 30 minutes including the paper presentation and questions from the floor.
Thu. 15.45-17.45 Savings & Welfare F, Chair: Jeanne Lafortune (Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile )
_ Stefania Basiglio (University of Turin and Tilburg University), Maria Cristina Rossi, Arthur van Soest, âSubjective inheritance expectations and economic outcomesâ
_ Yoko Niimi (Asian Growth Research Institute), âDo Borrowing Constraints Matter for Intergenerational Educational Mobility? Evidence from Japanâ
_ Luigi Ventura (Sapienza, University of Rome), âHouseholds as insurance mechanismsâ
_Max Groneck (University of Groningen), Johanna Wallenius, âSingle Mothers and the Welfare Stateâ
Thu. 15.45-17.45 Marriage F, Chair: Hippolyte d’Albis (Paris School of Economics)
_ Eva Garcia- Moran (University of Wuerzburg, Germany), Vincenzo Galasso, âFertility, Divorce and Remarriage: The Role of Secondary Marketsâ
_ Alexander Vickery (Royal Holloway University of London), âActions Speak Louder Than Words: Social Norms in the UK Marriage Marketâ
_ Hanno Foerster (University of Mannheim), âThe Impact of Post-Marital Maintenance on Dynamic Choices and Welfare of Couplesâ
_Christian Holzner ( University of Munich), Bastian Schulz , âMarriage and Divorce under Labor Market Uncertaintyâ
Thu. 15.45-17.45 Labor & Well-Being F, Chair: Ofira Schwartz-Soicher (Princeton University)
_Susan Averett (Lafayette College & IZA), Cynthia Bansak, Julie Smith, âBehind Every High Earning Man is a Conscientious Womanâ
_TerraMcKinnish (University of Colorado), âOverwork in Spouse’s Occupation & Degree Field and the Labor Market Outcomes of Skilled Womenâ
Chiara Monfardini (University of Bologna), Giorgio Bellettini, Carlotta Berti Ceroni, Enrico Canton, « Family Structure and the Turnout Gender Gap: Evidence from Italy »
_Catherine Sofer (University Paris I PanthĂ©on Sorbonne), Claire Thibout, âWomenâs Investment in Career and the Household Division of Laborâ
Thu. 15.45-17.45 Children & Parents F, Chair: Nancy E. Reichman (Rutgers University)
_Anne Laferrere (UniversitĂ© Paris Dauphine), âNeed for long-term care, informal care from children, type of welfare state, past transfers and prospective bequest: is there a link?â
_ Bart van Leeuwen (University of Groningen), âDaycare cost and time useâ
_Claire Thibout (The University of Melbourne), David Ribar, Seth Sanders, âDissolution, Conflict and Australian Childrenâs Developmental Outcomesâ
_Vincent Vergnat (Strasbourg University), âThe time and the transitions back to work in France after maternityâ
Thu. 15.45-17.45 Household Production & Food Insecurity F Chair Elsa Fontainha (ISEG Lisbon School of Economics & Management)
_ Melanie Borah (Otto von Guericke University Magdeburg), âAppreciating the Proceeds from Household Production. The Determination of Extended Income Equivalence Scales from Income Satisfaction and Time Use Dataâ
_ François Gardes (Paris 1 PanthĂ©on-Sorbonne), Christophe Starzec, âThe estimation of price elasticities and the value of time in a domestic production framework: an application on French micro-dataâ
_Anna ValluĆĄovĂĄ (Matej Bel University, Slovakia), âDeterminants of Intrahousehold Specialisation â An Insight into Time Economy of Slovak Householdsâ
_Craig Gundersen (University of Illinois), âFood Insecurity Research in the United States: Where We Have Been and Where We Need to Goâ
Thu. 18.00-18.30 SEHO members assembly