The benefits of having an entrepreneur-mother: Influence of mother's entrepreneurial status on human capital formation among children

IF 7.7 1区 管理学 Q1 BUSINESS Journal of Business Venturing Pub Date : 2023-08-02 DOI:10.1016/j.jbusvent.2023.106329
Wenchao Li , Di Tong
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Using nationally representative data from China, we find that children with entrepreneur-mothers exhibit better human capital formation outcomes—especially when they are younger and female. We further show that both supervision and value transmission are present, with the latter being a more important mechanism. Reconciling conflicting views in the literature, our study has both theoretical and practical implications.</p></div><div><h3>Executive summary</h3><p>Prior female entrepreneurship research suggests that women often choose to be entrepreneurs out of family, particularly childrearing, considerations. Entrepreneurship offers work autonomy and scheduling flexibility, allowing entrepreneur-mothers to better allocate time to childrearing activities. Given that numerous studies document a positive relationship between maternal time allocation and childrearing outcomes, conceivably entrepreneur-mothers should achieve favorable childrearing outcomes. Entrepreneurial research focusing on the business-family interface, however, suggests female entrepreneurs often face unanticipated pressures that limit their ability to care for family members. In addition, some female entrepreneurs may be motivated more by career than by childcare considerations. As such, the relationship between female entrepreneurship and childrearing outcomes remains conceptually and empirically ambiguous. Given the foregoing situation, we examine this relationship both theoretically and empirically, focusing on child human capital formation as a specific and important childrearing outcome.</p><p>Examining how female entrepreneurship relates to child human capital formation is of both scholarly and practical importance. First, it brings enhanced clarity to our understanding of the family- and child-related consequences of female entrepreneurship, thus affording reconciliation of the ambiguous predictions found in extant theories. 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To test these theoretical hypotheses, we use data from a nationally representative Chinese household survey, which contains separately surveyed parent and child data.</p><p>Our empirical analyses reveal that children with entrepreneur-mothers outperform those with non-entrepreneur-mothers in both cognitive and noncognitive skills. The effect is stronger for daughters and younger children. Additional analyses verify the presence of both supervision and value transmission mechanisms, with value transmission being more importantly in explaining the entrepreneur-mother effect.</p><p>Findings in this study deepen our knowledge on whether and how entrepreneur-mothers foster children's human capital formation. They highlight that—in addition to supervision—value transmission is a crucial channel through which entrepreneur-mothers exert an intergenerational impact on children. Our results also indicate that women running larger businesses—likely those with career motives and targets of policies that promote entrepreneurship—see better child human capital formation outcomes despite having potentially limited supervision capacity. 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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Prior research shows that childcare is a unique driver for female entrepreneurship, as entrepreneurship allows women to increase time allocation on child supervision. Yet, whether female entrepreneurship actually promotes childrearing outcomes remains contentious in extant literature. This study focuses on child human capital formation as a key childrearing outcome. Drawing on the occupational inheritance literature, we suggest that, in addition to supervision, entrepreneur-mothers may foster child human capital formation through value transmission—in particular, transmitting self-direction values to children. Using nationally representative data from China, we find that children with entrepreneur-mothers exhibit better human capital formation outcomes—especially when they are younger and female. We further show that both supervision and value transmission are present, with the latter being a more important mechanism. Reconciling conflicting views in the literature, our study has both theoretical and practical implications.

Executive summary

Prior female entrepreneurship research suggests that women often choose to be entrepreneurs out of family, particularly childrearing, considerations. Entrepreneurship offers work autonomy and scheduling flexibility, allowing entrepreneur-mothers to better allocate time to childrearing activities. Given that numerous studies document a positive relationship between maternal time allocation and childrearing outcomes, conceivably entrepreneur-mothers should achieve favorable childrearing outcomes. Entrepreneurial research focusing on the business-family interface, however, suggests female entrepreneurs often face unanticipated pressures that limit their ability to care for family members. In addition, some female entrepreneurs may be motivated more by career than by childcare considerations. As such, the relationship between female entrepreneurship and childrearing outcomes remains conceptually and empirically ambiguous. Given the foregoing situation, we examine this relationship both theoretically and empirically, focusing on child human capital formation as a specific and important childrearing outcome.

Examining how female entrepreneurship relates to child human capital formation is of both scholarly and practical importance. First, it brings enhanced clarity to our understanding of the family- and child-related consequences of female entrepreneurship, thus affording reconciliation of the ambiguous predictions found in extant theories. Accordingly, we advance research on female entrepreneurship. Exploring the relationship also adds to the family embeddedness perspective in the broader entrepreneurship literature, because child development is a crucial component within the family domain.

Second, our research has practical values and policy implications. Prospective female entrepreneurs may, regardless of their pre-entry intentions, be interested in learning how entering entrepreneurship could affect childrearing outcomes. Policymakers worldwide have been actively promoting entrepreneurship in the past few decades, mainly driven by economic and technological considerations. Because such efforts likely increase female participation in entrepreneurial activities, they should be evaluated to account for their family or childrearing consequences in addition to the economic and technological implications. Therefore, we provide evidence which prospective female entrepreneurs and policymakers can use to make informed decisions.

To study the effect of female entrepreneurship on child human capital formation, we note that the ambiguous predictions in extant work arise because it predominantly focuses on whether entrepreneur-mothers can allocate more time to childrearing activities, which we call “supervision”. We suggest that this supervision mechanism is not the only way in which the intergenerational impact occurs. Drawing on sociological research in occupational inheritance, we propose that entrepreneur-mothers could foster child human capital formation through transmitting self-direction values, thus promoting children's aspirations and achievements. To test these theoretical hypotheses, we use data from a nationally representative Chinese household survey, which contains separately surveyed parent and child data.

Our empirical analyses reveal that children with entrepreneur-mothers outperform those with non-entrepreneur-mothers in both cognitive and noncognitive skills. The effect is stronger for daughters and younger children. Additional analyses verify the presence of both supervision and value transmission mechanisms, with value transmission being more importantly in explaining the entrepreneur-mother effect.

Findings in this study deepen our knowledge on whether and how entrepreneur-mothers foster children's human capital formation. They highlight that—in addition to supervision—value transmission is a crucial channel through which entrepreneur-mothers exert an intergenerational impact on children. Our results also indicate that women running larger businesses—likely those with career motives and targets of policies that promote entrepreneurship—see better child human capital formation outcomes despite having potentially limited supervision capacity. Finally, our findings not only shed light on female entrepreneurship in China, a context with growing relevance in the global economy and rate of entrepreneurial activities, but also offer generalizable insights to other economies.

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拥有企业家母亲的好处:母亲的企业家地位对儿童人力资本形成的影响
先前的研究表明,育儿是女性创业的一个独特驱动力,因为创业使女性能够增加照看孩子的时间分配。然而,在现有文献中,女性创业是否真的能提高育儿效果仍存在争议。本研究的重点是儿童人力资本形成作为一个关键的儿童养育成果。根据职业继承文献,我们建议,除了监督之外,企业家母亲还可以通过价值观传递——特别是向孩子传递自我导向的价值观——来促进儿童人力资本的形成。利用中国具有全国代表性的数据,我们发现企业家母亲的孩子表现出更好的人力资本形成结果,特别是当他们更年轻和女性时。我们进一步表明,监督和价值传递同时存在,其中后者是更重要的机制。调和文献中相互矛盾的观点,我们的研究具有理论和实践意义。之前的女性创业研究表明,女性选择创业往往是出于家庭考虑,尤其是育儿方面的考虑。创业提供了工作自主权和时间安排的灵活性,使创业母亲能够更好地分配时间来照顾孩子。鉴于大量研究记录了母亲时间分配与育儿结果之间的正相关关系,可以想象,企业家母亲应该取得良好的育儿结果。然而,专注于企业与家庭关系的创业研究表明,女性企业家经常面临意想不到的压力,这限制了她们照顾家庭成员的能力。此外,一些女性企业家可能更多是出于职业考虑,而不是出于照顾孩子的考虑。因此,女性创业和育儿结果之间的关系在概念上和经验上仍然是模糊的。鉴于上述情况,我们从理论和经验两方面考察了这种关系,重点关注儿童人力资本形成作为一个具体而重要的儿童养育结果。研究女性创业与儿童人力资本形成之间的关系具有学术和实践意义。首先,它使我们更加清楚地理解女性创业对家庭和儿童的影响,从而为现有理论中发现的模糊预测提供了和解。因此,我们推进了对女性创业的研究。在更广泛的创业文献中,探索这种关系也增加了家庭嵌入性的观点,因为儿童发展是家庭领域的一个关键组成部分。其次,我们的研究具有实践价值和政策启示。未来的女性企业家可能会有兴趣了解进入企业会如何影响子女的养育结果,而不管她们进入企业之前的意图如何。在过去的几十年里,世界各地的政策制定者一直在积极推动创业,主要是出于经济和技术方面的考虑。由于这种努力可能增加妇女对企业活动的参与,因此在评价这些努力时,除了经济和技术影响外,还应考虑到其对家庭或子女的影响。因此,我们为未来的女性企业家和政策制定者提供了可以用来做出明智决策的证据。为了研究女性创业对儿童人力资本形成的影响,我们注意到,现有工作中出现的模糊预测,因为它主要关注企业家母亲是否能分配更多的时间来照顾孩子,我们称之为“监督”。我们认为这种监督机制并不是代际影响发生的唯一途径。借鉴职业传承的社会学研究,我们提出企业家母亲可以通过传递自我导向的价值观来促进儿童人力资本的形成,从而促进儿童的愿望和成就。为了检验这些理论假设,我们使用了来自具有全国代表性的中国家庭调查的数据,其中包括分别调查的父母和子女数据。我们的实证分析显示,母亲为企业家的孩子在认知和非认知技能方面都优于母亲为非企业家的孩子。这种影响在女儿和年幼的孩子身上更为明显。另外的分析证实了监督机制和价值传递机制的存在,其中价值传递在解释企业家-母亲效应方面更为重要。本研究的发现加深了我们对企业家母亲是否以及如何促进儿童人力资本形成的认识。 他们强调,除了监督之外,价值观传递是企业家母亲对孩子施加代际影响的重要渠道。我们的研究结果还表明,经营大型企业的女性——可能是那些有职业动机和促进创业政策目标的企业——尽管监管能力可能有限,但儿童人力资本形成的结果更好。最后,我们的研究结果不仅揭示了与全球经济和创业活动率日益相关的中国女性创业情况,而且还为其他经济体提供了可推广的见解。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
16.70
自引率
6.90%
发文量
59
审稿时长
77 days
期刊介绍: The Journal of Business Venturing: Entrepreneurship, Entrepreneurial Finance, Innovation and Regional Development serves as a scholarly platform for the exchange of valuable insights, theories, narratives, and interpretations related to entrepreneurship and its implications. With a focus on enriching the understanding of entrepreneurship in its various manifestations, the journal seeks to publish papers that (1) draw from the experiences of entrepreneurs, innovators, and their ecosystem; and (2) tackle issues relevant to scholars, educators, facilitators, and practitioners involved in entrepreneurship. Embracing diversity in approach, methodology, and disciplinary perspective, the journal encourages contributions that contribute to the advancement of knowledge in entrepreneurship and its associated domains.
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