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1.
Eur J Popul ; 34(4): 491-518, 2018 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30976252

ABSTRACT

The prediction of New Home Economics of a negative effect of female wages on fertility has been tested in a number of studies, but the results are far from unanimous. This article contributes with new evidence based on registry data covering all Norwegian women born in 1955-1974 and a simultaneous hazard model of transitions to first, second and third birth. We find a U-shaped relationship between wages and the log hazard for all cohorts, however, varying in strength and across parity. In transitions to first birth, most women are likely to be on the downward slope of the curve, implying that the wage effect is mainly negative. In transitions to second and third birth, most women are likely to be on the upward slope of the curve, where the wage effect is positive. The results are not very sensitive to the omission of education and income of the spouse.

2.
Demography ; 50(3): 1135-53, 2013 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23151997

ABSTRACT

This article analyzes male fertility, with a particular focus on multipartner fertility, for cohorts born 1955 to 1984 in Norway. We find that socioeconomically disadvantaged men have the lowest chance of becoming fathers and the lowest likelihood of fathering multiple children in stable unions. Multipartner fertility, on the other hand, is positively associated with both disadvantage and advantage: higher-order birth risks with a new partner are more prevalent among men with low as well as high socioeconomic status. An intervening factor among disadvantaged men may be a higher union dissolution risk, and an elevated risk among advantaged men may be associated with their higher preferences for children and other features that make these men more attractive to women as partners and fathers of future children.


Subject(s)
Family Characteristics , Fathers , Fertility , Sexual Partners , Adolescent , Adult , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Norway , Sexual Behavior , Socioeconomic Factors , Young Adult
3.
Popul Stud (Camb) ; 64(3): 209-27, 2010 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20954097

ABSTRACT

According to the 'reproductive polarization' hypothesis, family-policy regimes unfavourable to the combination of employment with motherhood generate greater socio-economic differentials in fertility than other regimes. This hypothesis has been tested mainly for 'liberal' Anglo-American regimes. To investigate the effects elsewhere, we compared education differentials in age at first birth among native-born women of 1950s and 1960s birth cohorts in seven countries representing three regime types. Women with low educational attainment have continued to have first births early, not only in Britain and the USA but also in Greece, Italy, and Spain. Women at all other levels of education have experienced a shift towards later first births, a shift that has been largest in Southern Europe. Unlike the educationally heterogeneous changes in age pattern at first birth seen under the Southern European and Anglo-American family-policy regimes, the changes across birth cohorts in the study's two 'universalistic' countries, Norway and France, have been educationally homogeneous.


Subject(s)
Family Planning Policy , Family Relations , Family , Fertility , Internationality , Adolescent , Adult , Age Factors , Cohort Studies , Data Collection , Demography , Educational Status , Europe , Female , Humans , Models, Theoretical , Pregnancy , Socioeconomic Factors , United States , Young Adult
4.
Demography ; 43(2): 255-67, 2006 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16889128

ABSTRACT

It has been argued that a society's gender system may influence parents' sex preferences for children. If this is true, one should expect to find no evidence of such preferences in countries with a high level of gender equality. In this article, we exploit data from population registers from Denmark, Finland, Norway, and Sweden to examine continuities and changes in parental sex preferences in the Nordic countries during the past three to four decades. First, we do not observe an effect of the sex of the first born child on second-birth risks. Second, we detect a distinct preference for at least one child of each sex among parents of two children. For third births, Danish, Norwegian, and Swedish parents seem to develop a preference for having a daughter, while Finns exhibit a significant preference for having a son. These findings show that modernization and more equal opportunities for women and men do not necessarily lead to parental gender indifference. On the contrary, they may even result in new sex preferences.


Subject(s)
Attitude/ethnology , Family Characteristics , Family Planning Policy , Parents/psychology , Sex Ratio , Denmark , Female , Finland , Humans , Male , Norway , Parity , Pregnancy , Registries , Risk , Social Desirability , Social Welfare , Sweden
5.
Popul Trends ; (121): 27-34, 2005.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16250301

ABSTRACT

Progressively later starting of childbearing has been a feature of cohort change in fertility across Europe and elsewhere over recent decades. Growing differences in the age patterns of childbearing between the Anglo-American and continental European countries, however, have also been found. The present study uses large linked-record databases in Britain, France and Norway to analyse these differences in more detail, focussing on age at entry to motherhood (first childbearing) by level of educational attainment among women born in the 1950s and in the 1960s. The shift between these two cohorts towards a later pattern of first childbearing in Britain was confined to women with secondary school qualifications and above. For women born in the 1960s, the peak age for risk of first childbearing among those with secondary school qualifications grew to be between seven and eleven years later than among women without secondary school qualifications. In France and Norway, the peak ages for risk of first childbearing shifted more uniformly across education levels between the two cohorts. For these 1950s and 1960s cohorts, improvements in women's educational levels also occurred more uniformly in France and Norway, moving more women into education categories characterised by later patterns of first childbearing.


Subject(s)
Birth Order , Educational Status , Maternal Age , Adolescent , Adult , Cohort Studies , Female , France , Humans , Norway , United Kingdom
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