Several studies have shown that at the individual level there exists a negative relationship between age at first birth and completed fertility. Using twin data in order to control for unobserved heterogeneity as possible source of bias, Kohler et al. (2001) showed the significant presence of such "postponement effect" at the micro level. In this paper, we apply sample selection models, where selection is based on having or not having had a first birth at all, to estimate the impact of postponing first births on subsequent fertility for four European nations, three of which have now lowest-low fertility levels. We use data from a set of comparative surveys (Fertility and Family Surveys), and we apply sample selection models on the logarithm...
BACKGROUND Postponement of childbearing since the 1970s has led to an increase in permanent involunt...
Fertility rates in most developed societies have been declining at younger ages and rising at older ...
Fertility differences in Europe are largely due to disparities in parity progression after the first...
Several studies have shown that at the individual level there exists a negative relationship between...
Fertility trends in European countries since the 1960s have been characterized by a notable decline ...
Transition to later childbearing regimes is a distinct feature of nations in the developed world. Si...
Fertility postponement and the concomitant decline in fertility levels are the most prominent trends...
We introduce a new formal model in which demographic behavior such as fertility is postponed by diff...
This paper examines the dispersion of fertility across age and time which has rarely beenstudied. Us...
I shift, stretch, and transform the observed cohort age-schedule of first birth for Danish women bor...
I shift, stretch, and transform the observed cohort age-schedule of first birth for Danish women bor...
This paper questions the demographic consequences of birth postponement in Europe. Starting from the...
International audienceBackground: This article questions the demographic consequences of birth postp...
Across developed countries, cohorts of women born after World War II have seen a shift of childbeari...
BACKGROUND Postponement of childbearing since the 1970s has led to an increase in permanent involunt...
Fertility rates in most developed societies have been declining at younger ages and rising at older ...
Fertility differences in Europe are largely due to disparities in parity progression after the first...
Several studies have shown that at the individual level there exists a negative relationship between...
Fertility trends in European countries since the 1960s have been characterized by a notable decline ...
Transition to later childbearing regimes is a distinct feature of nations in the developed world. Si...
Fertility postponement and the concomitant decline in fertility levels are the most prominent trends...
We introduce a new formal model in which demographic behavior such as fertility is postponed by diff...
This paper examines the dispersion of fertility across age and time which has rarely beenstudied. Us...
I shift, stretch, and transform the observed cohort age-schedule of first birth for Danish women bor...
I shift, stretch, and transform the observed cohort age-schedule of first birth for Danish women bor...
This paper questions the demographic consequences of birth postponement in Europe. Starting from the...
International audienceBackground: This article questions the demographic consequences of birth postp...
Across developed countries, cohorts of women born after World War II have seen a shift of childbeari...
BACKGROUND Postponement of childbearing since the 1970s has led to an increase in permanent involunt...
Fertility rates in most developed societies have been declining at younger ages and rising at older ...
Fertility differences in Europe are largely due to disparities in parity progression after the first...