Parental Job Loss and Children's Socioeconomic Disadvantage




Eskelinen, Niko; Jernström, Laura; Salokangas, Henri

PublisherSocArXiv from Center for Open Science

2025

136/2025

INVEST Working Papers

136

2737-0534

https://doi.org/10.31235/osf.io/bs3fd_v1

https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/508812686



Using high-quality administrative data, we study how parental labor market shocks affect children’s socioeconomic disadvantage. We find that the job loss of both fathers and mothers significantly increases the likelihood that children will experience a range of socioeconomic disadvantage indicators in adulthood, including being not in education, employment, or training (NEET), reliance on social assistance, and the use of unemployment benefits. In relative terms, we find that parental job loss increases children’s risk of socioeconomic disadvantage by up to 4.5% for sons and up to 3.9% for daughters. These effects persist for more than a decade after parental job displacement. The adverse impacts are particularly pronounced for boys and children exposed at older ages, suggesting heterogeneous vulnerability based on gender and developmental stage. Our results indicate that good labor market conditions – particularly in the case of fathers – may mitigate the adverse effects of parental job loss.


Last updated on 02/02/2026 02:00:05 PM