2015
DOI: 10.1080/13545701.2015.1120881
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The Effect of Culture on Fertility Behavior of US Teen Mothers

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Cited by 13 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…Utilizing empirical strategies analogous to ours, researchers have shown the substantial effect of culture on women's labor force participation and fertility (Contreras and Plaza 2010;Fernández and Fogli 2006;Fernández 2007;Fernández and Fogli 2009), unemployment (Brügger et al 2009), self-employment (Marcén 2014), the search for a job (Eugster et al 2016), on living arrangements (Giuliano 2007), divorce (Furtado et al 2013), on the math gender gap (Nollenberger et al 2016), and even on the fertility behavior of teen women (Bellido et al 2016). We contribute to these lines of research by extending the analysis on the impact of culture on the number children born.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Utilizing empirical strategies analogous to ours, researchers have shown the substantial effect of culture on women's labor force participation and fertility (Contreras and Plaza 2010;Fernández and Fogli 2006;Fernández 2007;Fernández and Fogli 2009), unemployment (Brügger et al 2009), self-employment (Marcén 2014), the search for a job (Eugster et al 2016), on living arrangements (Giuliano 2007), divorce (Furtado et al 2013), on the math gender gap (Nollenberger et al 2016), and even on the fertility behavior of teen women (Bellido et al 2016). We contribute to these lines of research by extending the analysis on the impact of culture on the number children born.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…So, for example, this would imply that having no children is equally acceptable for young women as for those at the end of their fertility years, or having few children is equally acceptable to society for those women with a high level of education, or who are employed, as for those with a low level of education, or those who are inactive in the labor market. This can be a strong assumption, since, even in a country in which the social norm is that women should have many children, it is possible to argue that the fertility culture differs depending on women's characteristics, as Bellido et al (2016) show for the case of teen motherhood. For this reason, we prefer to build our cultural proxy using data from the country of origin censuses, which allows us to consider possible fertility-cultural differences by age, education level, and employment status.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Similarly, we would also prefer to include as dependent variable the number of live births per country of origin of women, but as in the case of education, this information is quite limited. The incorporation of the immigrant population to this analysis is relevant since their fertility behavior may be different from that of native-born women (Bellido et al 2016;Kahn 1994) and there can also be differences in their response to an unemployment situation. With the limitation of the data, we can only address this issue by incorporating as control the annual percentage of immigrants over the total population in each country in Column (4) of Table 5.…”
Section: More Robustness Checksmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Results do not vary when we exclude these controls. We have incorporated all these controls in the paper, as do other works examining the home-ownership decision.14 Note that, using the cultural proxy by marital status we do not lose observations, as in the case of the cultural proxy measured by employment status.15 See a similar strategy inFurtado et al (2013) and.16 We have chosen country-of-origin Censuses as close as possible to the year 1970 (seeTable A2in the Appendix).17 The variation in the sample size is due to the availability of information for the 1970s.18 The omitted decade is the 1940s.19 The relationship between culture and home-ownership can be more complex than that between culture and, for example, fertility, where the fertility culture has been detected even in teenagers(Bellido et al 2016).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%