Household Income and Offspring Education Explain Blacks' Diminished Returns of Parental Education.

Open journal of psychology Pub Date : 2024-01-01 Epub Date: 2024-07-18 DOI:10.31586/ojp.2024.986
Shervin Assari, Hossein Zare
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Abstract

Background: High parental education promotes various aspects of offspring well-being including reducing their risk of depression/anxiety, criminal justice involvement, and welfare reliance. However, according to minorities' diminished returns, these benefits are not equal across racial groups, with Black families experiencing diminished returns of parental education compared to White families. This study explores the role of household income and offspring educational attainment as potential serial pathways that operate as mechanisms underlying diminished returns of parental education on offspring outcomes in Black families. Gender differences in these effects were also explored.

Methods: Utilizing data from the Future of Families and Child Wellbeing Study (FFCWS) over a 22-year follow-up period (seven waves), we examined the serial mediation by household income and offspring educational attainment in explaining the relationship between parental education and offspring outcomes namely depression, anxiety, criminal justice involvement, and welfare reliance [Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) and Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP)]. We used structural equation modeling (SEM) with household income as the first mediator and young adult education as the second mediator. Multi-group models were used to explore gender differences in these paths.

Results: The study confirmed the role of our proposed serial mediators for Blacks' weaker effects of parental education on offspring outcomes. We observed weaker effects of first affects household income, with this effect being for Black families compared to White families, which then impacted educational attainment of the offspring. The findings indicate that household income plays a crucial mediating role, but its effect is weaker in Black families. Additionally, the educational attainment of offspring from highly educated Black parents is less effective in improving outcomes compared to their White peers, further contributing to diminished returns. Some gender differences were observed for the effects of educational attainment on economic and health outcomes of young adults.

Conclusions: The study underscores the need to reconsider traditional assumptions about the comparability of family conditions and outcomes across racial groups with similar levels of parental education. The findings highlight the importance of targeted policies and interventions aimed at enhancing the economic stability and educational outcomes of Black families to address these disparities. Policies should focus on promoting the economic well-being of highly educated Black parents and improving the educational outcomes of their children.

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家庭收入和子女教育解释了黑人父母教育回报减少的原因。
背景:父母的高教育水平能促进子女各方面的福祉,包括降低他们患抑郁症/焦虑症、卷入刑事司法和依赖福利的风险。然而,根据少数族裔的收益递减原则,这些益处在不同种族群体中并不平等,黑人家庭与白人家庭相比,父母教育的收益递减。本研究探讨了家庭收入和后代受教育程度作为潜在序列途径的作用,这些途径是父母教育回报减少对黑人家庭后代结果的影响机制。研究还探讨了这些影响中的性别差异:利用 "未来家庭和儿童福祉研究"(FFCWS)22 年跟踪期(七波)的数据,我们研究了家庭收入和后代受教育程度在解释父母教育与后代结果(即抑郁、焦虑、刑事司法参与和福利依赖[贫困家庭临时援助(TANF)和补充营养援助计划(SNAP)])之间关系时的序列中介作用。我们采用结构方程模型(SEM),将家庭收入作为第一中介因素,将青年成人教育作为第二中介因素。多组模型用于探索这些路径中的性别差异:研究证实了我们提出的系列中介因素对黑人父母教育对后代结果影响较弱的作用。我们观察到,首先影响家庭收入的因素对黑人家庭的影响弱于白人家庭,进而影响后代的教育程度。研究结果表明,家庭收入起着至关重要的中介作用,但其对黑人家庭的影响较弱。此外,与白人同龄人相比,受过高等教育的黑人父母的后代受教育程度在改善结果方面的效果较差,这进一步导致了收益的减少。在教育程度对年轻成年人的经济和健康结果的影响方面,观察到了一些性别差异:本研究强调,有必要重新考虑关于父母教育水平相似的种族群体之间家庭条件和结果可比性的传统假设。研究结果凸显了旨在提高黑人家庭经济稳定性和教育成果的针对性政策和干预措施对于解决这些差异的重要性。政策应侧重于促进受过高等教育的黑人父母的经济福祉,并改善其子女的教育成果。
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