Volume 36 - Article 47 | Pages 1435–1452
The compositional effects of education and employment on Greek male and female fertility rates during 2000‒2014
Date received: | 29 Sep 2016 |
Date published: | 03 May 2017 |
Word count: | 2577 |
Keywords: | decomposition, economic recession, female fertility, Greece, male fertility |
DOI: | 10.4054/DemRes.2017.36.47 |
Abstract
Background: As many of the advanced countries that were hit hard by the recent economic recession also have persistently low fertility rates, researchers are increasingly interested in examining how the education‒employment gradient shapes fertility outcomes.
Objective: Our aim in this paper is to enrich the discussion about variation in crisis-driven fertility patterns by focusing on male fertility, and by comparing the fertility behavioral patterns and the compositional factors of male and female fertility under 'Great Recession' conditions.
Methods: We estimate the education- and employment-specific fertility rates of men and women for the 2000‒2014 period in Greece. Using a mixed standardization and decomposition method, we estimate the influence of changes in educational levels and employment status on total male and female fertility, which we call the "compositional effect;" and of changes in fertility behavior, which we call the "fertility effect."
Results: During the recent economic recession, the decline in fertility has been far from uniform across genders, educational levels, and employment statuses. Moreover, it appears that the changes in male and female fertility rates have been driven by different underlying forces. We find that among men, negative shifts in employability were exclusively responsible for the decline in fertility rates; whereas among women, changes in the TFR were steadily conditioned by the pure fertility effect.
Conclusions: Our findings suggest that the compositional effect on the period total fertility rate might be more important than fertility behavior per se, especially during time periods when economic variables clearly contribute to fertility outcomes.
Contribution: The topics tackled in the paper are potentially interesting and under-researched in particular in the context of the recent economic recession.
Author's Affiliation
Christos Bagavos - Panteion University of Social and Political Sciences, Greece
Alexandra Tragaki - Harokopio University, Greece
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