A closer look at demand-side explanations for the Matthew effect in formal childcare uptake in Europe and Australia

IF 2.7 1区 社会学 Q2 PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION Journal of European Social Policy Pub Date : 2023-07-18 DOI:10.1177/09589287231186068
Jonas Wood, K. Neels, Julie Maes
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Abstract

Although formal childcare is considered a key social investment policy to combat inequality, available research indicates that in most European and other high-income countries parents with lower socio-economic positions are less likely to use formal childcare. As the literature on the underlying causes of this so-called Matthew effect has not yet converged, this article is the first to assess whether educational gradients in formal childcare uptake can be accounted for by micro-level employment potential and work–family attitudes in 14 European countries and Australia. Complementing available research on supply-side factors such as policy design features, this study indicates that a large part of the educational gradients in formal childcare uptake persist after controlling for socio-demographic background variables, employment potential, and work–family attitudes as micro-level predictors. However, this study also shows that a considerable part of the educational differentiation in formal childcare uptake reflects differential employment potential. This finding turns attention to policies other than childcare to enhance labour market outcomes for lower educated groups, which in turn might attenuate the Matthew effect in formal childcare. Furthermore, a positive relation between individual-level work–family attitudes and the uptake of formal childcare is also identified as a partial explanation for educational gradients in formal childcare uptake. Although the explanatory power of work–family attitudes as an underlying determinant of the Matthew effect is more limited compared to employment potential, such variation in the acceptance of maternal employment and formal childcare should also be considered in the design of inclusive work–family policies.
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欧洲和澳大利亚正规托儿服务中马太效应的需求侧解释
虽然正规儿童保育被认为是对抗不平等的关键社会投资政策,但现有研究表明,在大多数欧洲和其他高收入国家,社会经济地位较低的父母不太可能使用正规儿童保育。由于关于这种所谓的马太效应的潜在原因的文献尚未汇集,本文首次评估了14个欧洲国家和澳大利亚的正规儿童保育吸收的教育梯度是否可以通过微观层面的就业潜力和工作家庭态度来解释。作为对供给侧因素(如政策设计特征)的现有研究的补充,本研究表明,在控制了社会人口背景变量、就业潜力和工作家庭态度作为微观水平预测因素后,正规儿童保育吸收的大部分教育梯度仍然存在。然而,本研究也表明,在接受正规托儿服务方面的教育差异在很大程度上反映了就业潜力的差异。这一发现将注意力转向了儿童保育以外的政策,以提高受教育程度较低群体的劳动力市场结果,这反过来可能会减弱正规儿童保育中的马太效应。此外,个人层面的工作-家庭态度与接受正规托儿服务之间的正相关关系也被确定为部分解释了接受正规托儿服务的教育梯度。虽然与就业潜力相比,工作-家庭态度作为马太效应的潜在决定因素的解释力更为有限,但在设计包容性工作-家庭政策时,也应考虑到接受母亲就业和正式儿童保育的这种差异。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.80
自引率
6.70%
发文量
40
期刊介绍: The Journal of European Social Policy publishes articles on all aspects of social policy in Europe. Papers should make a contribution to understanding and knowledge in the field, and we particularly welcome scholarly papers which integrate innovative theoretical insights and rigorous empirical analysis, as well as those which use or develop new methodological approaches. The Journal is interdisciplinary in scope and both social policy and Europe are conceptualized broadly. Articles may address multi-level policy making in the European Union and elsewhere; provide cross-national comparative studies; and include comparisons with areas outside Europe.
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