Title: Labor Market Activities and Fertility
1Labor Market Activities and Fertility
David E. Sahn and Stephen D. Younger
2Introduction
- In poor countries women
- have high fertility
- have high IMR/CMR
- have low education and high morbidity (as do
their children) - work
- at home
- in agriculture
- in informal self-employment
- In rich countries, women
- have low fertility
- have low IMR/CMR
- have high education and low morbidity (as do
their children) - work
- away from home
- formal wage jobs
3Introduction
- Relations between these factors are complex, with
important feedbacks, both static and dynamic - Here, our focus is on how women's labor market
activity relates to the other factors, especially
fertility and investments in children
4Policy Relevance
- New employment opportunities for women can reduce
fertility - Induced reductions in fertility can increase
womens employment - Both factors can lead to a demographic transition
and to poverty reduction
5Fertility/Work Trade-Off
Labor Market Activity
Fertility (Child Quantity)
6Fertility/Work Trade-Off
- Raising children is womens work in Africa (and
elsewhere) - Incompatibility of having children with work
outside the home in formal wage employment - no joint production
- inflexible hours in formal jobs
- Other household members may ease this trade-off
- extended family (grandmothers)
- older daughters (child labor)
7Child Quantity/Quality Trade-Off
Labor Market Activity
Fertility (Child Quantity)
Investments in Children (Child Quality)
8Child Quantity/Quality Trade-Off
- A key feature in the economic approach to
demography and development (Becker/Lewis) - substitution effects are exceptionally strong
- gross complementarity of work and investments in
children - Brings in a dynamic, intergenerational aspect
- Todays well-educated and healthy children are
tomorrows parents - parental education and income are clearly linked
to fertility, labor market choices, and their own
childrens human capital
9Thinking About Causality
- Work opportunities
- Growth/development
- Wages
- Reproductive Health Services
- Child Care Services
Labor Market Activity
Fertility (Child Quantity)
- Education
- Incomes (ex. mother)
- Norms and customs
Investments in Children (Child Quality)
School fees Public Health Services Health care
costs
10Thinking About Causality
- Work opportunities
- Growth/development
- Wages
- Reproductive Health Services
- Child Care Services
Labor Market Activity
Fertility (Child Quantity)
- Education
- Incomes (ex. mother)
- Norms and customs
Investments in Children (Child Quality)
School fees Public Health Services Health care
costs
11Labor Market Opportunities
- Effect of wage rates on womens time allocation,
fertility, and investments in children - substitution effect
- income effect
- note interaction of education with this effect
- Effect of job opportunities
- in rural Africa, opportunities for out-of-home
work are limited - some industries prefer female employees
- textiles/garments
- cut flowers
12Thinking About Causality
- Work opportunities
- Growth/development
- Wages
- Reproductive Health Services
- Child Care Services
Labor Market Activity
Fertility (Child Quantity)
- Education
- Incomes (ex. mother)
- Norms and customs
Investments in Children (Child Quality)
School fees Public Health Services Health care
costs
13Thinking About Causality
- Work opportunities
- Growth/development
- Wages
- Reproductive Health Services
- Child Care Services
Labor Market Activity
Fertility (Child Quantity)
- Education
- Incomes (ex. mother)
- Norms and customs
Investments in Children (Child Quality)
School fees Public Health Services Health care
costs
14(Shadow) Costs of Child Quality
- Fees for health services
- School fees
- For example, many African countries have recently
eliminated school fees. What has been the impact
on fertility, womens labor market activity, and
investment in children? - Clean water and other public health services
15Thinking About Causality
- Work opportunities
- Growth/development
- Wages
- Reproductive Health Services
- Child Care Services
Labor Market Activity
Fertility (Child Quantity)
- Education
- Incomes (ex. mother)
- Norms and customs
Investments in Children (Child Quality)
School fees Public Health Services Health care
costs
16Other Conditioning Factors
- Education
- increases market wages (see argument above)
- may affect attitudes and norms
- but may be jointly determined if women are
forward-looking - may also be endogenous, if pregnancy ends
schooling
17Other Conditioning Factors
- Income from sources other than the mother
- Attitudes, norms, and customs
- key part of modernization theory
- may have powerful interactions with other causal
variables
18Research Ideas Survey Data
- Use survey data to estimate the impact of wage
rates and/or labor market conditions on work,
fertility, and investments in children - Lam and Anderson (2002) in South Africa
- Use survey data to estimate the impact of
fertility shocks on labor force participation
and investments in children - twins shock - Rozensweig and Wolpin (1980)
- unwanted births Lloyd, et.al. (2006)
- Many other analogous possibilities for any of the
exogenous variables in the diagram
19Research Ideas Field Experiments
- Very popular in development economics these days
- Avoids the econometric problems that plague
survey research - Example randomized delivery of community and
reproductive health services in Northern Ghana
Niagia (2005)
20Research ideas Case Studies on Impact of
Economic Development
- Difficult to investigate interesting questions of
effect of economic development on employment,
fertility and human capital - Consider conducting case studies
- Grameen Bank-style microcredit
- Impact of export processing zones on fertility
and female labor force participation in Mauritius
- Bheenick and Shapiro (1989)
21Research Ideas Dynamics
- Intergenerational Dynamics
- models so far are static decisions for a woman
or family at one point in time - Child Labor
- may help to relax a mothers binding time
constraint that is key to many arguments - but at the cost of another vicious circle
22Concluding Thoughts and Extensions
- Very little of any of this type of research in
Africa the field looks wide open - Vast opportunities for AERC network
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