2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.rssm.2015.05.003
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Can’t afford a baby? Debt and young Americans

Abstract: This article explores the role of personal debt in the transition to parenthood. We analyze data from the National Longitudinal Study of Youth-1997 cohort and find that for the generation coming of age in the 2000s, student loans delay fertility for women, particularly at very high levels of debt. Home mortgages and credit card debt, in contrast, appear to be precursors to parenthood. These results indicate that different forms of debt have different implications for early adulthood transitions: whereas consum… Show more

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Cited by 67 publications
(58 citation statements)
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“…Racial disparities in student loan debt may also have larger implications for the transition to adulthood. Recent research shows that student loan debt is associated with delayed childbearing (Nau et al 2015), and marriage (Addo 2014), and as such rising debt may contribute to growing racial differences in successful transitions to adulthood (Furstenberg et al 2004). Given that blacks experience lower labor market returns to college than whites (Gaddis 2015), while also facing higher debt burdens and dropout risk, black young adults take a great deal more risk of enrolling in college, and reap fewer rewards to that risk.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Racial disparities in student loan debt may also have larger implications for the transition to adulthood. Recent research shows that student loan debt is associated with delayed childbearing (Nau et al 2015), and marriage (Addo 2014), and as such rising debt may contribute to growing racial differences in successful transitions to adulthood (Furstenberg et al 2004). Given that blacks experience lower labor market returns to college than whites (Gaddis 2015), while also facing higher debt burdens and dropout risk, black young adults take a great deal more risk of enrolling in college, and reap fewer rewards to that risk.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Among older, previously-married Americans, wealth accelerates both cohabitation and remarriage (Vespa 2012). For women, student debt is associated with fertility delay, while both mortgages and credit card debt accelerate transitions to parenthood (Nau et al 2015). …”
Section: Part Iii: Evidence On Wealth Consequences and Determinantsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, Schneider (2011) hypothesizes that in the marriage market possessing an asset may be more important than the asset’s value because asset ownership already signals marriageability. Likewise, Addo (2014) hypothesizes that credit card debt and education debt may be associated differently with union formation, due to the different financial structure and normativity of different types of debt, and Nau et al (2015) consider how different types of debt are associated with fertility timing. Although the authors do not always find unequivocal support for their hypotheses, their approaches illustrate the importance both of conceptualizing wealth as a cultural marker, not just a stock of financial resources, and of empirically identifying how wealth produces effects by disaggregating net worth into theoretically relevant components.…”
Section: Part Iii: Evidence On Wealth Consequences and Determinantsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Student‐loan debt in particular has been linked to higher levels of overall stress and anxiety (Andruska et al ) and lower levels of well‐being (Archuleta, Dale, and Spann ; West, Shanafelt, and Kolars ). In addition to studies showing that student‐loan debt causes stress, it has also been cited as a factor that can influence an individual after college, when decisions related to home ownership, family building, and career advances are most often made (William and Lewis ), and, too, decisions about whether to delay marriage (ASA ; Baum and O'Malley ) and when or whether to have children (Nau, Dwyer, and Hodson ). Given these findings and conclusions, we thus expected to find that the greater difficulty young adults experience regarding student‐loan repayment, the greater the stress they would report (hypothesis 4).…”
Section: Conceptual Model Development and Hypothesesmentioning
confidence: 99%