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'Like Father, Like Daughter' When Making Career Choice

by Tanya Thomas on Feb 26 2009 7:12 AM

Here's some good news for dads: daughters are likely to follow in their father's footsteps when it comes time to decide on a career, says a new study.

A new study has declared that daughters are more inclined towards choosing their fathers' career paths when it comes to making momentous decisions about the future.

According to a study co-authored by a researcher from North Carolina State University, the relationship between fathers and daughters is leading to an increase in the number of daughters who are pursuing careers in the same field as their dads.

The study shows that women born in the mid-1970s are over three times more likely than women born at the beginning of the 20th century to work in the same field as their fathers.

Much of this is attributable to changes in societal norms.

However, study co-author Dr. Melinda Morrill says that approximately 20 percent of that increase is due to an increase in the transmission of "job-specific human capital" from fathers to daughters. In other words, dads and daughters appear to be paying more attention to each other.

Morrill explains that due to changes in society, the researchers knew there would be an increase in the number of women entering into all kinds of men's jobs - including their fathers' jobs. In order to determine how much of that increase was attributable to changes in how fathers and daughters interact, as opposed to general societal changes, the researchers evaluated the number of women who entered into the occupation of their fathers-in-law.

The percentage of women who worked in the same field as their fathers-in-law - who had invested no human capital on the women - created a baseline showing the percentage increase that could be attributable just to changes in society.

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The researchers then evaluated the number of women who went into their fathers' line of work. By comparing the number of women who followed in their fathers' footsteps against the number of women who worked in the same field as their fathers-in-law, the researchers found that 13 to20 percent of the overall increase was attributable to the increased transmission of job-related human capital.

"Put simply," Morrill says, "dads are passing on some job-related skills to daughters."

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Source-ANI
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