Paper #891
- Título:
- The impact of women's educational and economic resources on fertility. Spanish birth cohorts 1901-1950
- Autores:
- Pau Baizán y Enriqueta Camps
- Fecha:
- Septiembre 2005
- Resumen:
- In this chapter we portray the effects of female education and professional achievement on fertility decline in Spain over the period 1920-1980 (birth cohorts of 1900-1950). A longitudinal econometric approach is used to test the hypothesis that the effects of women�s education in the revaluing of their time had a very significant influence on fertility decline. Although in the historical context presented here improvements in schooling were on a modest scale, they were continuous (with the interruption of the Civil War) and had a significant impact in shaping a model of low fertility in Spain. We also stress the relevance of this result in a context such as the Spanish for which liberal values were absent, fertility control practices were forbidden, and labour force participation of women was politically and socially constrained.
- Palabras clave:
- Fertility decline, human capital, intergenerational transfers of knowledge
- Códigos JEL:
- J22, J24, J13, J16
- Área de investigación:
- História Económica y de la Empresa
- Publicado en:
- Angelique Janssens (ed.) Gendering the Fertility Decline in the Western World, New York et alt., Peter Lang, 2007
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