This paper quantifies the effects of Russia’s 1981 expansion in maternity benefits on completed childbearing. The program provided one year of partially paid parental leave and a small cash transfer upon a child’s birth. I exploit the program’s two-stage implementation and find evidence that women had more children as a result of the program. Fertility rates rose immediately by 8.2% over twelve months. The increase in fertility rates not only persisted for the ten-year duration of the program, but it reflected large increases in higher-order births to older women who already had children before the program started
Russia is experiencing steady population decline. One of the reasons for this is low fertility. The ...
Until the early 1990s, the common characteristics of Russian fertility were early and almost univers...
Abstract Governments throughout the world have responded to soaring women’s labor force participa...
This paper quantifies the effects of Russia’s 1981 expansion in maternity benefits on completed chil...
This paper quantifies effects of a maternity benefit program in Russia on childbearing. The program ...
Replication Data for: "Can Maternity Benefits Have Long-Term Effects on Childbearing? Evidence from ...
This paper examines the family policy reforms of 2007 in Russia that were aimed explicitly at encour...
Female employment rates in Russia have declined substantially since the end of the Soviet period. At...
The idea of an extraordinary growth in fertility in Russia is widespread in the Russian expert commu...
This paper documents the evolving impact of childbearing on the work activity of mothers between 178...
From 2007 up until now, Russia’s period fertility rate (TFR) increased at a relative constant pace. ...
This paper analyzes the effects of changes in the duration of paid, job-protected parental leave on ...
The literature on life satisfaction dynamics during parenthood relies largely on data from Western c...
In this paper, we investigate the child penalty in Russia using data from the Russian Longitudinal ...
Theory suggests that abortion restrictions will influence fertility outcomes such as pregnancy, abor...
Russia is experiencing steady population decline. One of the reasons for this is low fertility. The ...
Until the early 1990s, the common characteristics of Russian fertility were early and almost univers...
Abstract Governments throughout the world have responded to soaring women’s labor force participa...
This paper quantifies the effects of Russia’s 1981 expansion in maternity benefits on completed chil...
This paper quantifies effects of a maternity benefit program in Russia on childbearing. The program ...
Replication Data for: "Can Maternity Benefits Have Long-Term Effects on Childbearing? Evidence from ...
This paper examines the family policy reforms of 2007 in Russia that were aimed explicitly at encour...
Female employment rates in Russia have declined substantially since the end of the Soviet period. At...
The idea of an extraordinary growth in fertility in Russia is widespread in the Russian expert commu...
This paper documents the evolving impact of childbearing on the work activity of mothers between 178...
From 2007 up until now, Russia’s period fertility rate (TFR) increased at a relative constant pace. ...
This paper analyzes the effects of changes in the duration of paid, job-protected parental leave on ...
The literature on life satisfaction dynamics during parenthood relies largely on data from Western c...
In this paper, we investigate the child penalty in Russia using data from the Russian Longitudinal ...
Theory suggests that abortion restrictions will influence fertility outcomes such as pregnancy, abor...
Russia is experiencing steady population decline. One of the reasons for this is low fertility. The ...
Until the early 1990s, the common characteristics of Russian fertility were early and almost univers...
Abstract Governments throughout the world have responded to soaring women’s labor force participa...