We found a match
Your institution may have access to this item. Find your institution then sign in to continue.
- Title
On the age-specific correlation between fertility and female employment: Heterogeneity over space and time in OECD countries.
- Authors
Brehm, Uta; Engelhardt, Henriette
- Abstract
BACKGROUND Though there has been profound research on the curious change in correlation between total fertility rate (TFR) and female labor force participation (FLP) in the mid-1980s, aspects of the compositional character of age-specific effects and the nature of countries' heterogeneity have been neglected. OBJECTIVE The present paper aims to contribute to filling this gap by analyzing annual total fertility rates and their equivalents for four age groups between 20 and 39 years as well as the respective lagged FLP from 17 OECD countries between 1985 and 2010. METHODS Random Intercept and Random Coefficient Models are applied, allowing us to assess both effects and country heterogeneity in slopes and intercepts. RESULTS The analyses reveal that the development of the correlation between FLP and TFR after 1985 is comprised of very different relations between age-specific fertility and labor participation. The youngest group's situation is determined by a decrease in both fertility and FLP, while countries' effects differ increasingly. The oldest women's fertility decisions seem to be detached from labor market influences, though country variation is high. Women in their late 20s and early 30s, in contrast, appear to be most affected by the incompatibility of childbearing and gainful employment. Though these effects seem to have overcome their low points during the mid-1990s, only women in their early 30s show country-convergence. CONCLUSION The results highlight the fact that total and age-specific fertility behavior, FLP-effects and country variances are distinct concepts that add considerably to the broad understanding of the correlation between fertility and FLP.
- Subjects
HETEROGENEITY; TOTAL fertility rate (Humans); HUMAN fertility statistics; MULTILEVEL models; CHILDBIRTH
- Publication
Demographic Research, 2015, Vol 32, p691
- ISSN
1435-9871
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.4054/DemRes.2015.32.23