Friday, 17 April 2020

Changes in the association between social housing tenure and child outcomes across cohorts: comparing the millennium and British cohort studies

an article by Bilal Nasim (University College London, UK) published in Journal of Children and Poverty Volume 26 Issue 1 (2020)

Abstract

In recent decades, social housing in the UK has increasingly become the preserve of the poorest in society.

This paper is the first to investigate how the child outcome penalties associated with social housing tenure have changed over time across UK cohorts. I compare the differences in the cognitive, mental health, and physical health outcomes of children in social housing with children in non-social housing and evaluate whether these tenure differences have changed between the 1970 British Cohort Study (BCS) and the 2000 Millennium Cohort Study (MCS).

I find that in both cohorts, children in social housing exhibit worse outcomes across all three dimensions (cognitive, mental health, and physical health) than children in non-social housing.

For cognitive and physical health outcomes, however, the tenure difference has narrowed between the two cohorts, while for mental health outcomes, the tenure difference has widened.

These results suggest that children have experienced a relative worsening in their mental health outcomes across cohorts, but also a relative improvement in both their cognitive and physical health outcomes. The findings suggest that policies aimed at reducing tenure inequalities in child outcomes should focus on mental health development in the early years.

Labels:
social_housing_tenure, child_outcomes, cohort_studies, mental_health_development,


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