Impact of Parenting Styles on Cognitive and Non-Cognitive Skills of Young Children: Evidence from Rural Thailand
Abstract
This study investigates the role of parenting styles in child development in rural Thailand using early childhood panel data. Our results from various specifications indicate that authoritarian parenting style was negatively and significantly associated with the child’s non-cognitive skills, while the results for cognitive skills were generally insignificant. These results imply that parenting styles affect non-cognitive skills but not cognitive skills of children aged between five and eleven years. However, we found that the impact of authoritative parenting is less conclusive.