posted on 2006-05-30, 11:25authored byTomas Koegel
Recent literature finds that in OECD countries the cross-country correlation between the total fertility rate and the female labor force participation rate, which until the beginning of the 1980s had a negative value, has since acquired a positive value. This result is (explicitly or implicitly) often interpreted as evidence for a changing sign in the time-series association between fertility and female employment within OECD countries. This paper shows that the time-series association between fertility and female employment does not demonstrate a change in sign. Instead, the reversal in the sign of the cross-country correlation is most likely due to a combination of two elements: First, the presence of unmeasured country-specific factors and, second, country-heterogeneity in the magnitude of the negative timeseries association between fertility and female employment. However, the paper does find evidence for a reduction in the negative time-series association between fertility and female employment after about 1985.
History
School
Business and Economics
Department
Economics
Pages
299207 bytes
Citation
KOEGEL, T., 2004. Did the association between fertility and female employment within OECD countries really change its sign? Journal of Population Economics, 17(1), pp.45-65.