Does Early Childbearing Matter? New Approach Using Danish Register Data

Publikation: Working paperForskning

Standard

Does Early Childbearing Matter? New Approach Using Danish Register Data. / Rosenbaum, Philip.

2019.

Publikation: Working paperForskning

Harvard

Rosenbaum, P 2019 'Does Early Childbearing Matter? New Approach Using Danish Register Data'. https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2669965

APA

Rosenbaum, P. (2019). Does Early Childbearing Matter? New Approach Using Danish Register Data. SSRN: Social Science Research Network https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2669965

Vancouver

Rosenbaum P. Does Early Childbearing Matter? New Approach Using Danish Register Data. 2019 jan. 9. https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2669965

Author

Rosenbaum, Philip. / Does Early Childbearing Matter? New Approach Using Danish Register Data. 2019. (SSRN: Social Science Research Network ).

Bibtex

@techreport{58c47d641e8b46bdb442b908d8827a01,
title = "Does Early Childbearing Matter?: New Approach Using Danish Register Data",
abstract = "Work interruptions related to childbearing are expected to affect mothers{\textquoteright} wages directly through changes in the formation of human capital. This effect is proposed as being exceptionally strong for early childbearing women who are about to start their working careers. This study investigates whether the poor long-term labor market outcomes experienced by women who first gave birth before turning 25 reflect previously existing disadvantages or are a consequence of the timing of childbearing. The purpose is also to observe whether a new combination of the best identification practices of earlier studies serves as a better estimation method. This is done by applying a within-family estimator while treating miscarriages as exogenous variation, thereby mitigating family and individual heterogeneity, which might have biased earlier results based on either of the two identification strategies alone. It is found that early childbearing has no long-term effects on women{\textquoteright}s earnings.",
keywords = "Faculty of Social Sciences, Fertility, child penalty, female labor outcomes",
author = "Philip Rosenbaum",
year = "2019",
month = jan,
day = "9",
doi = "10.2139/ssrn.2669965",
language = "English",
series = "SSRN: Social Science Research Network ",
type = "WorkingPaper",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - Does Early Childbearing Matter?

T2 - New Approach Using Danish Register Data

AU - Rosenbaum, Philip

PY - 2019/1/9

Y1 - 2019/1/9

N2 - Work interruptions related to childbearing are expected to affect mothers’ wages directly through changes in the formation of human capital. This effect is proposed as being exceptionally strong for early childbearing women who are about to start their working careers. This study investigates whether the poor long-term labor market outcomes experienced by women who first gave birth before turning 25 reflect previously existing disadvantages or are a consequence of the timing of childbearing. The purpose is also to observe whether a new combination of the best identification practices of earlier studies serves as a better estimation method. This is done by applying a within-family estimator while treating miscarriages as exogenous variation, thereby mitigating family and individual heterogeneity, which might have biased earlier results based on either of the two identification strategies alone. It is found that early childbearing has no long-term effects on women’s earnings.

AB - Work interruptions related to childbearing are expected to affect mothers’ wages directly through changes in the formation of human capital. This effect is proposed as being exceptionally strong for early childbearing women who are about to start their working careers. This study investigates whether the poor long-term labor market outcomes experienced by women who first gave birth before turning 25 reflect previously existing disadvantages or are a consequence of the timing of childbearing. The purpose is also to observe whether a new combination of the best identification practices of earlier studies serves as a better estimation method. This is done by applying a within-family estimator while treating miscarriages as exogenous variation, thereby mitigating family and individual heterogeneity, which might have biased earlier results based on either of the two identification strategies alone. It is found that early childbearing has no long-term effects on women’s earnings.

KW - Faculty of Social Sciences

KW - Fertility

KW - child penalty

KW - female labor outcomes

UR - http://www.mendeley.com/research/timing-first-childbirth-matter-new-approach-danish-register-data

U2 - 10.2139/ssrn.2669965

DO - 10.2139/ssrn.2669965

M3 - Working paper

T3 - SSRN: Social Science Research Network

BT - Does Early Childbearing Matter?

ER -

ID: 217654428