Abstract

This article compares how having a child with special needs shapes the labour market adaptations of immigrant and majority mothers. We use longitudinal data from Norwegian public registers including all women who gave birth between 2001 and 2005 ( N = 104,988), and follow the mothers from two years before birth to four years after birth. We find generally large differences in employment and income among immigrant and majority mothers. Majority mothers typically adapt to the intensified care responsibilities associated with having a child with special needs by working somewhat less, but most importantly by combining work with high levels of long-term sickness absence. By contrast, immigrant mothers substantially reduce their work intensity (as measured through labour earnings) after childbirth regardless of whether their child has special needs. Among immigrant mothers whose child has special needs, we do not find elevated sickness absence levels comparable to that of majority mothers. Given the already reduced work intensity among immigrant mothers in the years following the birth of their child, we do not find additional labour market consequences of intensified care responsibilities within this group of mothers.

Highlights

  • Studies consistently find that having children impairs women’s attachments to the labour market

  • Based on the theoretical framework we have presented we hypothesize that immigrant mothers who care for a child with special needs will be more severely affected than majority mothers, by reducing their participation in paid work

  • Transformed from the log scale back to Norwegian Kroner (NOK), the average income for majority mothers over the observation period is 209,190 NOK, whereas the average income among immigrant mothers is as low as 93,246 NOK

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Summary

Introduction

Studies consistently find that having children impairs women’s attachments to the labour market. Keywords Labour market outcomes, immigrants, intensified care needs, sickness absence, employment, income, mothers

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Conclusion
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