Volume 41 - Article 35 | Pages 1021–1046
Housework share and fertility preference in four East Asian countries in 2006 and 2012
By Man-Yee Kan, Ekaterina Hertog, Kamila Kolpashnikova
This article is part of the Special Collection 25 "Domestic division of labour and fertility choice in East Asia"
Abstract
Background: Previous research suggested that husbands’ participation in housework is positively associated with fertility choices for both women and men. We tested this association by using data of four East Asian countries.
Objective: This paper examines whether the positive association between gender-equal sharing of housework participation and fertility intention in China, Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan has strengthened between 2006 and 2012.
Methods: We harmonize two datasets, the 2006 East Asian Social Survey and the 2012 International Social Survey Programme. We employ OLS and ordered logit models estimators to test the association between husband’s housework participation and the ideal number of children.
Results: In both 2006 and 2012, husband’s participation in housework is associated with both own and partner’s fertility intentions in 2006 and 2012. The association between the domestic division of labour and fertility has not changed between 2006 and 2012.
Conclusions: Corroborating the findings of our earlier paper the results suggest that a more gender-equal domestic division of labour in East Asia is associated with higher fertility intentions in this region. The gender revolution framework offers a plausible explanation for the East Asian fertility trends between 2006 and 2012. The findings suggest that there is a stall in the pace of the gender revolution.
Contribution: This paper provides a summary of the trends highlighted by the contributors to this special issue. This is also the first paper to look at the evolution of domestic division of labour and fertility preferences in four East Asian countries over time.
Author's Affiliation
- Man-Yee Kan - University of Oxford, United Kingdom EMAIL
- Ekaterina Hertog - University of Oxford, United Kingdom EMAIL
- Kamila Kolpashnikova - University of Oxford, United Kingdom EMAIL
Other articles by the same author/authors in Demographic Research
The gender gap in the United States: Housework across racialized groups
Volume 43 - Article 36
Domestic division of labour and fertility preference in China, Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan
Volume 36 - Article 18
Singlehood in contemporary Japan: Rating, dating, and waiting for a good match
Volume 44 - Article 10
Japanese adolescents' time use: The role of household income and parental education
Volume 44 - Article 9
A new family equilibrium? Changing dynamics between the gender division of labor and fertility in Great Britain, 1991–2017
Volume 40 - Article 50
Most recent similar articles in Demographic Research
Educational trends in cohort fertility by birth order: A comparison of England and Wales, Scotland, and Northern Ireland
Volume 51 - Article 36
| Keywords:
birth order,
cohort analysis,
cross-national study,
England,
family size,
fertility,
Northern Ireland,
parity,
Scotland,
Wales
Higher incomes are increasingly associated with higher fertility: Evidence from the Netherlands, 2008–2022
Volume 51 - Article 26
| Keywords:
fertility,
income,
inequalities,
Netherlands,
parenthood
The short- and long-term determinants of fertility in Uruguay
Volume 51 - Article 10
| Keywords:
fertility,
panel data,
stages of female reproductive life,
time series,
Uruguay
The big decline: Lowest-low fertility in Uruguay (2016–2021)
Volume 50 - Article 16
| Keywords:
adolescent fertility,
birth order,
fertility,
Latin America,
ultra-low fertility,
Uruguay
Cohort fertility of immigrants to Israel from the former Soviet Union
Volume 50 - Article 13
| Keywords:
age at first birth,
assimilation,
cohort analysis,
fertility,
immigration,
parity,
religiosity
Cited References: 35
Download to Citation Manager
PubMed
Google Scholar