Gender differences in household education expenditure: two-step hurdle model

This study examines the evidence on gender differences in household education expenditure. It also aims to handle the potential channel of bias in gender differences in expenditure. The sample of household education expenditure in Malaysia provided by the Department of Statistics Malaysia consists o...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sarimah Surianshah, G.D. Fraja, S. Bridges
Format: Proceedings
Language:English
English
Published: Faculty of Science and Natural Resources 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/26948/1/Gender%20differences%20in%20household%20education%20expenditure.pdf
https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/26948/2/Gender%20differences%20in%20household%20education%20expenditure1.pdf
_version_ 1796910573719388160
author Sarimah Surianshah
G.D. Fraja
S. Bridges
author_facet Sarimah Surianshah
G.D. Fraja
S. Bridges
author_sort Sarimah Surianshah
collection UMS
description This study examines the evidence on gender differences in household education expenditure. It also aims to handle the potential channel of bias in gender differences in expenditure. The sample of household education expenditure in Malaysia provided by the Department of Statistics Malaysia consists of a significant number of households, which is 47% of 8,332 households that do not report their education expenditure (missing). Thus, to prevent potential bias estimates in the household education expenditure model source from the missing data, this study employs the two-step Hurdle Model. The first step is to estimate whether households enrol their child into school or not, and the second step is to estimate how much expenses are spent on children's education conditional on households with children enrolled in school only. While there is no significant results using the standard Working-Leser model, the Hurdle model shows that there are significant differences in educational spending between sons and daughters in the younger age group (5-12 years). Specifically, households preferred to spend money on sons’ education about double of the daughters’ education expenditure. Researchers may wish to consider this method when handling significant missing data to prevent potential bias in estimation.
first_indexed 2024-03-06T03:06:30Z
format Proceedings
id ums.eprints-26948
institution Universiti Malaysia Sabah
language English
English
last_indexed 2024-03-06T03:06:30Z
publishDate 2020
publisher Faculty of Science and Natural Resources
record_format dspace
spelling ums.eprints-269482021-06-09T03:06:00Z https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/26948/ Gender differences in household education expenditure: two-step hurdle model Sarimah Surianshah G.D. Fraja S. Bridges L Education (General) This study examines the evidence on gender differences in household education expenditure. It also aims to handle the potential channel of bias in gender differences in expenditure. The sample of household education expenditure in Malaysia provided by the Department of Statistics Malaysia consists of a significant number of households, which is 47% of 8,332 households that do not report their education expenditure (missing). Thus, to prevent potential bias estimates in the household education expenditure model source from the missing data, this study employs the two-step Hurdle Model. The first step is to estimate whether households enrol their child into school or not, and the second step is to estimate how much expenses are spent on children's education conditional on households with children enrolled in school only. While there is no significant results using the standard Working-Leser model, the Hurdle model shows that there are significant differences in educational spending between sons and daughters in the younger age group (5-12 years). Specifically, households preferred to spend money on sons’ education about double of the daughters’ education expenditure. Researchers may wish to consider this method when handling significant missing data to prevent potential bias in estimation. Faculty of Science and Natural Resources 2020 Proceedings PeerReviewed text en https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/26948/1/Gender%20differences%20in%20household%20education%20expenditure.pdf text en https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/26948/2/Gender%20differences%20in%20household%20education%20expenditure1.pdf Sarimah Surianshah and G.D. Fraja and S. Bridges (2020) Gender differences in household education expenditure: two-step hurdle model. https://www.ums.edu.my/fssa/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/PROCEEDINGS-BOOK-ST-2020-e-ISSN.pdf
spellingShingle L Education (General)
Sarimah Surianshah
G.D. Fraja
S. Bridges
Gender differences in household education expenditure: two-step hurdle model
title Gender differences in household education expenditure: two-step hurdle model
title_full Gender differences in household education expenditure: two-step hurdle model
title_fullStr Gender differences in household education expenditure: two-step hurdle model
title_full_unstemmed Gender differences in household education expenditure: two-step hurdle model
title_short Gender differences in household education expenditure: two-step hurdle model
title_sort gender differences in household education expenditure two step hurdle model
topic L Education (General)
url https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/26948/1/Gender%20differences%20in%20household%20education%20expenditure.pdf
https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/26948/2/Gender%20differences%20in%20household%20education%20expenditure1.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT sarimahsurianshah genderdifferencesinhouseholdeducationexpendituretwostephurdlemodel
AT gdfraja genderdifferencesinhouseholdeducationexpendituretwostephurdlemodel
AT sbridges genderdifferencesinhouseholdeducationexpendituretwostephurdlemodel