TY - JOUR AU - Page,Marianne E. AU - Stevens,Ann Huff TI - Will You Miss Me When I Am Gone? The Economic Consequences of Absent Parents JF - National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper Series VL - No. 8786 PY - 2002 Y2 - February 2002 UR - http://www.nber.org/papers/w8786 L1 - http://www.nber.org/papers/w8786.pdf N1 - Author contact info: Marianne E. Page Department of Economics University of California, Davis Davis, CA 95616-8578 Tel: 530-554-4940 Fax: NA E-Mail: mepage@ucdavis.edu Ann Huff Stevens Department of Economics One Shields Avenue University of California, Davis Davis, CA 95616 Tel: 530/752-3034 E-Mail: annstevens@ucdavis.edu M2 - featured in NBER digest on 2002-07-01 AB - This paper examines the effects of family structure on the economic resources available to children, using family fixed-effects to control for unobservable characteristics of the family. The effects of divorce on the income and consumption of children born to two-parent households, and the effects of marriage on children born into single-parent households are both considered. In the long-run (six or more years after the most recent divorce) family income falls by 40 to 45% after divorce, and food consumption is reduced by 17%. Six or more years after the most recent marriage, income of children born to single parents rises by 50 to 57%, but there is no statistically significant increase in food consumption. These estimates are substantially less than the difference in income implied by cross-sectional comparisons of different family types. When income changes are measured according to time since the parents first divorce, there is substantial recovery in income, virtually all of which is explained by subsequent remarriages. Similarly, when we look at income several years after a parent's first marriage, the gain is 28 to 33%, reflecting the short-lived nature of many of these marriages. ER -