Publication Type
Journal Article
Version
acceptedVersion
Publication Date
12-2023
Abstract
The instability of fathers’ co-residence with children has become an increasingly prevalent experience for U.S. families. Despite long-standing scholarship examining the relationship between fatherhood and wage advantages, few studies have investigated how variation in fathers’ stable co-residence with a child may produce temporal changes in the wage premium over the life course. Building on prior explanations of the fatherhood wage premium, I test if the wage premium grows with time since the birth of a resident child and if the premium depends on fathers’ co-residence with a child. I use marginal structural models with repeated outcome measures and data from 4060 men in the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1979 to assess the cumulative influence of co-residential biological fatherhood on wages. I find that each year of residential fatherhood is associated with a wage gain of 1.2 percent, while the immediate wage benefit to residential fatherhood is minor. Thus, the fatherhood premium is better understood as an unfolding process of cumulative advantage rather than a one-time bonus. Furthermore, the wage premium ceases to accumulate once fathers lose co-residential status with a child, which highlights the contingency of the premium on stable co-residence. Together, these findings shed light on one pathway through which family (in)stability—a phenomenon fundamentally embedded in individual life experiences—stratifies men’s wages across the life course.
Discipline
Behavioral Economics | Family, Life Course, and Society
Research Areas
Sociology
Publication
Social Forces
Volume
102
Issue
2
First Page
475
Last Page
495
ISSN
0037-7732
Identifier
10.1093/sf/soad066
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Citation
GOWEN, Ohjae.(2023). Becoming a father, staying a father: An examination of the cumulative fatherhood wage premium to U.S. residential fathers. Social Forces, 102(2), 475-495.
Available at: https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soss_research/4102
Copyright Owner and License
Authors
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 International License.
Additional URL
https://doi.org/10.1093/sf/soad066