Catholic countries of Europe pose a demographic puzzle –fertility is unprecedentedly low (total fertility=1.3) despite low female labor force participation. We model three channels of religious effects on demand for children: through changing norms, reduced market wages, and reduced costs of childrearing. We estimate their effects using new panel data on church attendance and clergy employment for thirteen European countries from 1960-2000, spanning the Second Vatican Council (1962-65). Catholic theology is uniform across countries. Yet service varied considerably across countries and over time, especially before the Council, reflecting differences in Church provision of education, health, welfare and other social services. We use different...
Total fertility rates throughout the European Union have fallen and are now below the replacement ra...
Many studies on the fertility differential by religion have considered both Catholics and Protestant...
We investigate the impact of papal visits to Italian provinces on abortions from 1979 to 2012. Using...
Catholic countries of Europe pose a demographic puzzle –fertility is unprecedentedly low (total fert...
Total fertility in the Catholic countries of Southern Europe has dropped to remarkably low rates (=1...
Total fertility in the Catholic countries of Southern Europe has dropped to remarkably low rates (=1...
Fertility rates are far below replacement in Southern Europe, averaging 1.4 lifetime children per wo...
Catholicism and Protestantism have different ways of promoting the family unit that could influence ...
Osnovni cilj rada je analiza fertiliteta odabranih europskih zemalja na skupnoj razini prema kriteri...
Over the last decades labour market participation of women increased, while fertility declined in mo...
This is the final version of the article. It first appeared from Springer via http://dx.doi.org/10.1...
We present a model capable of explaining 200 years of declining fertility, 200 years of rising educa...
<b>Background</b>: France has been among the first countries to become sacularized but has preserved...
Total fertility rates throughout the European Union have fallen and are now below the replacement ra...
Many studies on the fertility differential by religion have considered both Catholics and Protestant...
We investigate the impact of papal visits to Italian provinces on abortions from 1979 to 2012. Using...
Catholic countries of Europe pose a demographic puzzle –fertility is unprecedentedly low (total fert...
Total fertility in the Catholic countries of Southern Europe has dropped to remarkably low rates (=1...
Total fertility in the Catholic countries of Southern Europe has dropped to remarkably low rates (=1...
Fertility rates are far below replacement in Southern Europe, averaging 1.4 lifetime children per wo...
Catholicism and Protestantism have different ways of promoting the family unit that could influence ...
Osnovni cilj rada je analiza fertiliteta odabranih europskih zemalja na skupnoj razini prema kriteri...
Over the last decades labour market participation of women increased, while fertility declined in mo...
This is the final version of the article. It first appeared from Springer via http://dx.doi.org/10.1...
We present a model capable of explaining 200 years of declining fertility, 200 years of rising educa...
<b>Background</b>: France has been among the first countries to become sacularized but has preserved...
Total fertility rates throughout the European Union have fallen and are now below the replacement ra...
Many studies on the fertility differential by religion have considered both Catholics and Protestant...
We investigate the impact of papal visits to Italian provinces on abortions from 1979 to 2012. Using...