Title: Employment Decisions of European Women After Childbirth
1Employment Decisions of European Women After
Childbirth
- Chiara Pronzato (ISER)
- EPUNet Conference, May 9th 2006
2Aims
- What do women do after childbirth?
- How long do they take to start working?
- Which characteristics of the woman, the household
and the environment make more likely the decision
to work after the childbirth? - How does the social environment (childcare and
parental leave arrangements) affect mothers
participation behaviour?
3Motivations
- Development of human capital financial
independence - Higher female participation (and fertility) to
maintain the welfare system (EU objective)
4Outline
- Estimation of the determinants of post-birth
employment, separately for each country - Simulation of a NEW sample for each country, by
using its own estimated parameters and statistics - Introduction of the characteristics of the
environment in a dataset which comprises all NEW
samples
5Post-birth employmentThe methodological
framework
- Maximization of household lifetime utility
- at any moment, she decides to participate in the
labour market if - offered wage gt reservation wage
-
- her productivity her productivity at home
in the labour market
(number and ages of her (human
capital) children)
6Post-birth employmentThe methodological
framework
- when time passes by
- the probability to be employed is decreased by
the loss in human capital which affects her
potential wage - and increased by the loss in her productivity at
home (due to childs age) which impacts on her
reservation wage
7Post-birth employmentThe methodological
framework
- X womans characteristics
- H households characteristics
- E economic environment
- J time elapsed from the childbirth
8Sample selection
European Community Household Panel (ECHP)
Work? Yes
Work? No
Work? No
childbirth
9Samples
10Variables in the model
- X womans potential wage
- H household income (social transfers, private
income, male/grandparents earnings) - lone mother/ extended family
- first childbirth, other kids born along the spell
- E regional unemployment rate (REGIO)
- t time elapsed from the childbirth (T-1)
11Variables in the model
Work? Yes
Work? No
Work? No
childbirth First childbirth? Potential wage
Time elapsed from the childbirth Lone mother?
Extended family? Other kids? Household income
Unemployment rate
12Post-birth employmentResults
- Positive effect of
- the potential wage
- the extended family (ES, EL, LU)
- the first childbirth compared to the subsequent
ones - the time from the childbirth (GE, DK, UK, FI)
- Negative effect of
- the household income
- being a lone mother (NL, BE, UK, PT)
- other kids born during the spell
- regional unemployment
- the time from the childbirth (NL, BE, LU, IT)
13Post-birth fertilityDescriptive Statistics
14Simulation of NEW samples
- According to the country specific estimated
parameters, we simulate the probability to be
still inactive for a group of women, given the
possible combinations of these characteristics - Potential wage (3 levels)
- Child aged between 0 and 3
- Family structure (3 possibilities)
- Household income (3 levels)
- First childbirth (2 possibilities)
- Other kids (2 possibilities)
- Unemployment rate (2 levels)
15Maternity and parental leaves in Europe
16Childcare services in Europe
17Characteristics of the Environment
Child 0-2 Child 3
Leave (low educ) 0.240 - 0.069
Leave (medium) 0.127 - 0.085
Leave (high) 0.045 - 0.175
Childcare - 0.077 - 0.090
North 0.135 - 0.984
South - 0.106 - 0.457
Constant 0.296 2.116
18Cross-country comparison
19Summary
- Amount of time that mothers take to return to
work heterogeneity among countries - Most of the difference in post birth
participation in Europe is due to differences in
labour market participation among less educated
women - Stronger effect of womans human capital in South
Europe - Women in countries with long parental leave tend
to take advantage of it delaying their return
(not highly educated ones) - Women in countries with high availability of
childcare services tend to start working sooner - When the child is 3, these environmental
characteristics do not seem to affect mothers
labour market participation anymore