Volume 39 - Article 28 | Pages 795–834
Economic uncertainty and first-birth intentions in Europe
By Susanne Fahlén, Livia Sz. Oláh
This article is part of the Special Collection 31 "The new roles of women and men and implications for families and societies"
Abstract
Background: The demographic challenge Europe is facing due to long-term low fertility, accompanied by pronounced economic uncertainty, indicates the need for adequate policy response based on a thorough understanding of the economic uncertainty–fertility decisions–public policy nexus.
Objective: We address the relationship between societal economic conditions, individual economic uncertainty, and short-term first-birth intentions of women and men in ten European countries, representing various institutional contexts before and after the Great Recession.
Methods: We analyse European Social Survey data from 2004 and 2011. After addressing the macro-level association, we study the micro-level relationship in regard to perceived security of employment and income situation, based on multiple logistic regression models.
Results: Societal economic uncertainty is negatively associated with short-term parenthood intentions, especially for men. Regarding subjective economic security, men’s labour market position matters irrespectively of the institutional context, but women’s labour market position matters at younger ages only and in particular welfare regimes (the Postsocialist and Familialistic regimes). Perceived income security is less important at higher ages for either gender and for women below age 30, especially in the aftermath of the crisis. Men in their early thirties show the lowest fatherhood intentions in a constrained situation.
Contribution: Our findings highlight the continued importance of economic uncertainty for fertility plans, especially for men, who still seem to consider themselves as the primary earner in couples. For young employed women, a secure position is a precondition for first birth, but motherhood appears as attractive alternative to unemployment above age 30, except for Postsocialist and Universal clusters.
Author's Affiliation
- Susanne Fahlén - Stockholms Universitet, Sweden EMAIL
- Livia Sz. Oláh - Stockholms Universitet, Sweden EMAIL
Other articles by the same author/authors in Demographic Research
Introduction to the Special Collection on The new roles of women and men and implications for families and societies
Volume 48 - Article 29
Equality at home - A question of career? Housework, norms, and policies in a European comparative perspective
Volume 35 - Article 48
Should governments in Europe be more aggressive in pushing for gender equality to raise fertility? The second "YES"
Volume 24 - Article 9
Reconciling studies of men’s gender attitudes and fertility: Response to Westoff and Higgins
Volume 22 - Article 8
Men's childbearing desires and views of the male role in Europe at the dawn of the 21st century
Volume 19 - Article 56
Sweden: Combining childbearing and gender equality
Volume 19 - Article 28
Gender and family stability: Dissolution of the first parental union in Sweden and Hungary
Volume 4 - Article 2
Becoming a Mother in Hungary and Poland during State Socialism
Special Collection 3 - Article 9
Most recent similar articles in Demographic Research
Left behind single in the partnering market? Entry into cohabiting unions by women and men with low educational attainment across regions of Europe, cohorts 1960 to 1985
Volume 51 - Article 43
| Keywords:
cohabitation,
education,
Europe,
European Social Survey,
event history analysis,
logistic regression,
marginalization,
partner selection,
singlehood,
union formation
Is single parenthood increasingly an experience of less-educated mothers? A European comparison over five decades
Volume 51 - Article 34
| Keywords:
age,
children,
cross-national comparison,
education,
Europe,
family life course,
inequality,
single motherhood
The transition to adulthood in Europe at the intersection of gender and parental socioeconomic status
Volume 51 - Article 23
| Keywords:
Europe,
Europe,
event history,
event history,
gender,
multilevel analysis,
parental socio-economic status,
stratification,
transition to adulthood
The intergenerational transmission of migration capital: The role of family migration history and lived migration experiences
Volume 50 - Article 29
| Keywords:
childhood,
emigration,
Europe,
immigration,
life course
Measuring the educational gradient of period fertility in 28 European countries: A new approach based on parity-specific fertility estimates
Volume 49 - Article 34
| Keywords:
education,
Europe,
period fertility,
quantum,
tempo,
total fertility rate (TFR)
Cited References: 91
Download to Citation Manager
PubMed
Google Scholar