27 research outputs found

    Gender differentiation in intergenerational care-giving and migration choices

    Get PDF
    We weave together care-giving, gender, and migration. We hypothesize that daughters who are mothers have a stronger incentive than sons who are fathers to demonstrate to their children the appropriate way of caring for one’s parents. The reason underlying this hypothesis is that women on average live longer than men, they tend to marry men who are older than they are and, thus, they are more likely than men to spend their last years without a spouse. Because it is more effective and less costly to care for parents if they live nearby, daughters with children do not move as far away from the parental home as sons with children or childless offspring. Data on the distance between the children’s location and the parents’ location extracted from the Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe (SHARE), in conjunction with data on selected demographic characteristics and institutional indicators taken from Eurostat, the OECD, and the World Bank, lend support to our hypothesis: compared to childless daughters, childless sons, and sons who are fathers, daughters who are mothers choose to live closer to their parents’ home

    The role of parenthood in the gender wage gap

    Get PDF

    The sex preference for children in Europe: Children's sex and the probability and timing of births

    Get PDF
    Background: The preference for having children of a particular sex may be reflected in fertility behavior. For example, parents who want to have a son may be more likely to have another child if their firstborn child is female or if they have two female children. They may also speed up the conception, resulting in a faster progression to the next child. Objective: We examine whether there is a sex preference for children in Europe, which is reflected in an increased/decreased probability of having another child and a shorter/longer time to the next birth given the sex of existing children. We distinguish between progression to the second and the third child and different cohorts. Methods: We model the impact of children's sex on fertility using event history analysis. We apply mixture cure models, which allow us to distinguish between the probability of experiencing the event of interest and its timing. Results: We find evidence of the preference for having a girl, reflected in an increased probability of not having a second child if the first child is female. We also find that women who have two children of the same sex are more likely to give birth to a third child. Contribution: We contribute to research on the sex preference for children by (1) providing a comprehensive analysis of a number of European countries using consistent data and methodology, (2) examining the progression to the second and the third child, (3) distinguishing between different cohorts of women, and (4) applying mixture cure models

    The impact of parenthood on the gender wage gap – a comparative analysis of 26 European countries

    Get PDF

    A gyermekvállalás szerepe a női–férfi bérkülönbség alakulásában

    Get PDF

    A nők munkaerőpiaci helyzete a visegrádi országokban = The Labor Market Situation of Women in the Visegrad Countries

    Get PDF

    Karrier gyermekvállalás előtt és után

    Get PDF

    One Size Fits All? Gender Differences in the Effect of Subjective Feedback

    Get PDF

    Career before and after having a child

    Get PDF
    corecore