Abstract
This chapter assesses how children’s serious illness or disability affects the labour market participation of all adults living in a household. The chapter goes beyond the usual father–mother analyses and accounts for the context of developing countries characterised by an extended family structure. It uses the National Income Dynamics Study panel data and utilises fixed-effects logistic regressions and linear regressions for analysis. The results show that a child’s illness or disability significantly increases the employment odds of fathers while reducing those of mothers. These effects are even stronger among married parents. Non-parent males are more likely to work, while no significant effect is found on non-parent females. Child illness is associated, although not significantly, with the wider difference in the proportion of males and females working at the household level. This shows that there is an urgent need for policymakers to be concerned about families with ill or disabled children and to reduce the employment gender gap and make progress towards the fifth Sustainable Development Goal.
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Notes
- 1.
For people aged 15 and above, a separate question was asked regarding the presence of some specific conditions. This was followed by the question, ‘Do you have any other major illnesses or disability not mentioned above?’ with subsequent reports of the illness/disability.
- 2.
There are, however, few immigrants among non-parent female relatives, so the results of this variable in this group should be interpreted cautiously.
- 3.
The full table of descriptive statistics is available upon request.
- 4.
The generalised linear model with binomial family and logit link for proportion produced very similar results.
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Simo Fotso, A., Somefun, O.D., Odimegwu, C. (2020). Child Health and Relatives’ Employment in South Africa: The Gendered Effect Beyond Parents. In: Konte, M., Tirivayi, N. (eds) Women and Sustainable Human Development. Gender, Development and Social Change. Palgrave Macmillan, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-14935-2_12
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