@article{Nie_43_29, author = {Nie, Wanli}, title={{The effect of spousal separation and reunification on fertility: Chinese internal and international migration}}, journal = {Demographic Research}, volume = {43}, number = {29}, pages = {851--888}, doi = {10.4054/DemRes.2020.43.29}, year = {2020}, abstract = {Background: In a modern society with massive long-distance migration due to rapid development of transportation infrastructure, spousal separation has a substantial and cumulative effect on marital fertility (Menken 1979) due to not only lower intercourse frequency, but also factors affecting fertility in both the destination and origin locations. Objective: This paper investigates the effect of spousal separation on marital fertility for Chinese internal migrants and international migrants to the US. Methods: Using data from the Chinese International Migration Project, I jointly model the first, second and third births, and spousal separation applying event-history techniques and controlling for unobserved heterogeneity. Time-varying information on both partners’ occupations is incorporated to capture the changes in their socioeconomic status. Results: The results show that the first two births are disrupted by spousal separation. Reunification does not lead to higher fertility but rather implies lower fertility. Moreover, there is a tendency for couples who are separated due to the migration of one partner to also have higher fertility levels. Conclusions: Concerns regarding the dramatic rise in migrant births after family reunification are not empirically grounded. Couple separation is related to a traditional division of labour. Furthermore, the correlation between migration and fertility mainly comes from the selectivity of household income. Contribution: This paper sheds light on the effects of migration-related changes in couples’ living arrangements on fertility, analysed by birth order in under-researched contexts: China-US migration and internal migration from Fujian province. Both migration types have dramatically increased in China in recent decades. }, URL = {https://www.demographic-research.org/volumes/vol43/29/}, eprint = {https://www.demographic-research.org/volumes/vol43/29/43-29.pdf} }