The effect of fertility on mothers' labor supply over the last two centuries
This paper documents the evolving impact of childbearing on the work activity of mothers. Based on a compiled dataset of 441 censuses and surveys between 1787 and 2015, representing 103 countries and 48.4 million mothers, we document three main findings: (1) the effect of fertility on labor supply is small and typically indistinguishable from zero at low levels of development and economically large and negative at higher levels of development; (2) this negative gradient is remarkably consistent across histories of currently developed countries and contemporary cross-sections of countries; and (3) the results are strikingly robust to identification strategies, model specification, data construction, and rescaling. We explain our results within a standard labor-leisure model and attribute the negative labor supply gradient to changes in the sectoral and occupational structure of female jobs as countries develop.
Year of publication: |
2017
|
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Authors: | Aaronson, Daniel ; Dehejia, Rajeev H. ; Jordan, Andrew ; Pop-Eleches, Christian ; Samii, Cyrus ; Schulze, Karl |
Publisher: |
Chicago, IL : Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago |
Saved in:
freely available
Series: | Working Paper ; 2017-14 |
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Type of publication: | Book / Working Paper |
Type of publication (narrower categories): | Working Paper |
Language: | English |
Other identifiers: | 1010731378 [GVK] hdl:10419/200570 [Handle] |
Source: |
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012030343
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