This article contributes to the search for explanations of the cross-national variation in fertility rates by studying the influence of social policy, economic and cultural factors on fertility in the former EU15, while giving special attention to one case: The Netherlands. This country lacks good social policy for supporting parents to combine work and care and nevertheless has a relatively high fertility rate. This article addresses the backgrounds of that phenomenon, using comparative macro level data from several sources, such as ‘the child benefit package’, the European Values Studies, OECD and Eurostat. We argue that bivariate relationships cannot explain cross-national variation in fertility rates. Therefore, we analyse configuration...
URL des Documents de travail : http://ces.univ-paris1.fr/cesdp/cesdp2016.htmlDocuments de travail du...
The decline in fertility has been linked to changes in educational attainment, particularly among wo...
The link between employment and fertility is often only examined by focussing on women's labour mark...
This article contributes to the search for explanations of the cross-national variation in fertility...
This article contributes to the search for explanations of the cross-national variation in fertility...
This article contributes to the search for explanations of the cross-national variation in fertility...
This article contributes to the search for explanations of the cross-national variation in fertility...
Fertility in the Netherlands has never dipped to the extremely low levels observed in some other Eur...
The Netherlands has seen a considerable decline of the period total fertility rate and delayed child...
This paper studies the effect of different types of child subsidies on the economic allocation and t...
Fertility levels have fallen drastically in most industrialized countries. Diverse theoretical and e...
Birth rates differ strongly across European states, despite the deep economic har-monisation process...
URL des Documents de travail : https://centredeconomiesorbonne.cnrs.fr/publications/Documents de tra...
URL des Documents de travail : http://ces.univ-paris1.fr/cesdp/cesdp2016.htmlDocuments de travail du...
The decline in fertility has been linked to changes in educational attainment, particularly among wo...
The link between employment and fertility is often only examined by focussing on women's labour mark...
This article contributes to the search for explanations of the cross-national variation in fertility...
This article contributes to the search for explanations of the cross-national variation in fertility...
This article contributes to the search for explanations of the cross-national variation in fertility...
This article contributes to the search for explanations of the cross-national variation in fertility...
Fertility in the Netherlands has never dipped to the extremely low levels observed in some other Eur...
The Netherlands has seen a considerable decline of the period total fertility rate and delayed child...
This paper studies the effect of different types of child subsidies on the economic allocation and t...
Fertility levels have fallen drastically in most industrialized countries. Diverse theoretical and e...
Birth rates differ strongly across European states, despite the deep economic har-monisation process...
URL des Documents de travail : https://centredeconomiesorbonne.cnrs.fr/publications/Documents de tra...
URL des Documents de travail : http://ces.univ-paris1.fr/cesdp/cesdp2016.htmlDocuments de travail du...
The decline in fertility has been linked to changes in educational attainment, particularly among wo...
The link between employment and fertility is often only examined by focussing on women's labour mark...