Full Citation
Title: Family Dinner Timing and Human Capital Investments in Children
Citation Type: Journal Article
Publication Year: 2021
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ISSN:
DOI: 10.1007/s11150-021-09554-x
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Abstract: Although previous research documents that having dinner together as a family positively relates to long-run child and family outcomes, one aspect of family dinner that has not been explored previously is the role that dinner timing may play in facilitating or hindering parental time investments in their children. We use time diary data for roughly 41,000 families from the nationally representative American Time Use Survey (2003–2019) to examine whether the timing of family dinner is correlated with differential parental time investments in children during the evening. We find that parents who start dinner as a family before the median time (6:15 p.m.) spend more quality time in the evening with their children, including more time reading and playing with their children. The relationship cannot be explained by observable family constraints, as it is stable regardless of parental labor force activity and the day of the week. Additionally, parents who eat dinner later do not reallocate quality time to other times of the day. These findings suggest that having dinner earlier may be an important mechanism facilitating parental time investments in children.
Url: https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11150-021-09554-x
User Submitted?: Yes
Authors: Price, Joseph; Rodgers, Luke P.; Wikle, Jocelyn S.
Periodical (Full): Review of Economics of the Household
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Data Collections: IPUMS USA, IPUMS Time Use - ATUS
Topics: Family and Marriage
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