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Economics of Fertility

Paper Session

Sunday, Jan. 6, 2019 1:00 PM - 3:00 PM

Atlanta Marriott Marquis, International 1
Hosted By: American Economic Association
  • Chair: Kasey Buckles, University of Notre Dame

Fertility and the Cost of a Child: Evidence from Quebec Parental Insurance Plan

Qiongda Zhao
,
University of Calgary
Chi Man Yip
,
University of Calgary

Abstract

This paper analyzes fertility responses to family policies. We construct a dynamic model in which households make decisions on consumption, saving, and fertility. Our analytical model features discrete choices of fertility: the number and the timing of births. Our model generates new insights into fertility transitions and the timing of births in response to family policies.

We test the model on women affected by a parental leave reform in the Canadian province of Quebec. Beginning January 1, 2006, the government of Quebec launched the Quebec Parental Insurance Plan, also known as QPIP, which replaced Employment Insurance for residents of Quebec. Compared to Employment Insurance, which covered the residents rest of Canada, QPIP offers higher ceiling on insured income ($51, 000 compared with $39,000 in the rest of Canada) and higher income-replacement rates (ranging between 55% and 75%, depending on the specific plans). QPIP considerably increased the amount of cash transferred to families during the first year postpartum. Using data from Canadian Vital Statistics Birth Records, we show that the policy induced on average about 5 more live births per 1, 000 women. For those aged 25 to 34, the policy lead to some 10 more live births per 1,000 women, around 10 percent increase in fertility rate. These effects persist in the long run. Using data from Longitudinal Administrative Databank, we show that the effects are most prominent among the higher income earners, consistent with the program incentives and our model’s prediction. The paper sheds light on one important question amid the fertility literature: when we observe fertility responds to some incentives, are they permanent or just transitory? This paper addresses the issue by analyzing both cross-sectional transitory effects and cohorts’ completed fertility.

Fertility Cost, Intergenerational Labor Division, and Female Employment

Jin Cao
,
Norges Bank

Abstract

China has set to increase the minimum retirement age, to ease the pressure from pension expenditure and the falling labor supply caused by the ageing population. However, policy debates have so far neglected the crucial fact that families in China largely rely on retired grandparents for childcare. Using novel and high-quality survey data, we demonstrate that intrafamily downward labor transfer towards childcare significantly increases young females’ labor force participation rate and their labor income, and such effects do not exist for males. Furthermore, we show that the positive effects from grandparental childcare are higher for better-educated, urban females with younger children. This paper thus reveals a large, hidden cost in the new retirement policy — the reduced feasibility of grandparental support, due to postponed retirements, may crowd out productive labor of young females, — and rationalizes a series of social protection policies to accompany the phase-in of the new retirement scheme.

Natural Disasters, Mortality, Fertility, and Educational Attainment in Africa

Johannes Norling
,
Mount Holyoke College

Abstract

This paper documents demographic changes associated with natural disasters in Africa. The paper draws on two main data sources: Records of thousands of droughts, floods, and other natural disasters that struck Africa between 1900 and 2016; and large-scale household surveys conducted across Africa since 1977. Infant mortality rises by 1.2 percent during a natural disaster, and women have 0.5 percent fewer children on average in the five years following a natural disaster. There are also long-term changes to educational attainment. Women aged 6–10 during natural disaster have a slight decrease of less than 0.1 years of completed schooling, while men of school age during a natural disaster complete an additional 0.4 years.

The Impact of a Rural Clinic Expansion on the Fertility of Young Rural Women in Mexico

Laura Juarez
,
College of Mexico
Paulina Lopez
,
Princeton University

Abstract

We estimate the effects of a rural health clinic expansion for the uninsured, which started in 1980 in Mexico, on the fertility of young rural women in 1987. Our results show that access to rural clinics decreased young women's fertility, particularly for the youngest in our sample. We find that clinics have positive and significant impacts on contraceptive knowledge and use, supporting the link between the decrease in fertility and the family planning services provided by the clinics. Finally, we find evidence suggesting that the delay in fertility for these women allowed them to increase their schooling.

The Impacts of Reduced Access to Abortion and Family Planning Services on Abortion, Births, and Contraceptive Purchases

Stefanie Fischer
,
California Polytechnic State University-San Luis Obispo
Heather Royer
,
University of California-Santa Barbara
Corey White
,
California Polytechnic State University-San Luis Obispo

Abstract

Between 2011 and 2014, Texas enacted three pieces of legislation that significantly reduced funding for family planning services and increased restrictions on abortion clinic operations. Together this legislation creates cross-county variation in access to abortion and family planning services, which we leverage to understand the impact of family planning and abortion clinic access on abortions, births, and contraceptive purchases. In response to these policies, abortions to Texas residents fell 20.5% and births rose 2.6% in counties that no longer had an abortion provider within 50 miles. Changes in the family planning market induced a 1.5% increase in births for counties that no longer had a publicly funded family planning clinic within 25 miles. Meanwhile, responses of retail purchases of condoms and emergency contraceptives to both abortion and family planning service changes were minimal.
JEL Classifications
  • J1 - Demographic Economics