This paper focuses on the interaction between gender discrimination and household decisions. It develops a model with endogenous fertility, endogenous labor supply and endogenous size of government spending. Family policies which concern childcare services are assumed to reduce the time that parents spend on their children. The model shows that gender discrimination may explain differences in household decisions between countries. The solution shows a U-shaped relationship between fertility and gender discrimination if the quality of childcare services is sufficiently high. In the decreasing part of this U-shaped curve, a decrease in the discrimination level implies a related increase in fertility, women's participation in the labor force a...
Falling fertility rates have often been linked to rising female wages. However, over the last 40 yea...
Due to conventional gender norms, women are more likely to be in charge of childcare than men. From ...
"This paper is inspired by the many similarities between gendered welfare state research and demogra...
This paper focuses on the interaction between gender discrimination and household decisions. It deve...
URL des Documents de travail : http://ces.univ-paris1.fr/cesdp/CESFramDP2008.htmClassification JEL :...
In this paper we aim to assess the extent to which individual-level completed/nfertility varies acro...
Historically, in virtually all developed economies there seems to be clear evidence of an inverse re...
It is often an underlying assumption that the new role of women and in general the trend toward a mo...
We examine how far fertility trends respond to family policies in OECD countries. In the light of th...
Using comparable data for 24 countries since the 1970s, we document gender convergence in schooling,...
This paper studies the effect of cultural attitudes on childcare provision, fertility, female labour...
Recent demographic literature shows in Swedish micro-level data a positive effect of female wage inc...
Discussion paper issued by Centre for Economic Performance, London School of EconomicsIncreases in f...
This paper concentrates on the role of job matching frictions in influencing the interactions betwee...
This study explores whether the diffusion of gender-equitable attitudes towards female employment is...
Falling fertility rates have often been linked to rising female wages. However, over the last 40 yea...
Due to conventional gender norms, women are more likely to be in charge of childcare than men. From ...
"This paper is inspired by the many similarities between gendered welfare state research and demogra...
This paper focuses on the interaction between gender discrimination and household decisions. It deve...
URL des Documents de travail : http://ces.univ-paris1.fr/cesdp/CESFramDP2008.htmClassification JEL :...
In this paper we aim to assess the extent to which individual-level completed/nfertility varies acro...
Historically, in virtually all developed economies there seems to be clear evidence of an inverse re...
It is often an underlying assumption that the new role of women and in general the trend toward a mo...
We examine how far fertility trends respond to family policies in OECD countries. In the light of th...
Using comparable data for 24 countries since the 1970s, we document gender convergence in schooling,...
This paper studies the effect of cultural attitudes on childcare provision, fertility, female labour...
Recent demographic literature shows in Swedish micro-level data a positive effect of female wage inc...
Discussion paper issued by Centre for Economic Performance, London School of EconomicsIncreases in f...
This paper concentrates on the role of job matching frictions in influencing the interactions betwee...
This study explores whether the diffusion of gender-equitable attitudes towards female employment is...
Falling fertility rates have often been linked to rising female wages. However, over the last 40 yea...
Due to conventional gender norms, women are more likely to be in charge of childcare than men. From ...
"This paper is inspired by the many similarities between gendered welfare state research and demogra...