School Entry Cutoff Date and the Timing of Births

57 Pages Posted: 27 Jul 2015 Last revised: 25 Jun 2026

See all articles by Hitoshi Shigeoka

Hitoshi Shigeoka

Simon Fraser University (SFU); University of Tokyo - University of Tokyo, Graduate School of Public Policy; IZA Institute of Labor Economics; National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER)

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Date Written: July 2015

Abstract

Using birth records in Japan, where school entry rule is strictly enforced, this paper shows that more than 1,800 births a year are shifted from one week before the school entry cutoff date to one week following the cutoff date. Because older children perform better academically than their younger peers, parents who value potential long-term academic gains over the short-term gain of childcare cost savings do exploit birth timing as a means of early childhood investment. Heterogeneous responses by parents violate the assumption of regression discontinuity design that births around the school entry cutoff dates are random.

Suggested Citation

Shigeoka, Hitoshi, School Entry Cutoff Date and the Timing of Births (July 2015). NBER Working Paper No. w21402, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2636162

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