The economic theory of the family as proposed by Becker (1981, 1991) predicts clearly the relationship between income (especially the mother's income) and fertility. Indeed, it assesses that an income effect and a substitution effect could coexist, whose net impact is thus to be determined empirically. Many authors have already attempted to do so, some interested in the effect of the woman's wage on fertility, others focusing on the effect of some family policy measures on the decision to have a first child. Our own analysis is situated in this latter framework. Using the Luxembourgish sample of the EU-SILC data, we estimate the effect observed in the Grand-Duchy and compare the result with those obtained in France, a country with quite sim...
The Demographic Transition enabled the productivity advances of the Industrial Revolution to be chan...
In France, the intervention of the state in the private sphere has long been accepted as legitimate....
The past two decades inWestern European societies have been marked by a decline 10 in fertility rate...
There has been little empirical work evaluating the sensitivity of fertility to financial incentives...
The current total fertility rate in France has been rising over the last ten years and reached 1.98 ...
Among reasons being push forward to explain the relatively high level of fertility in France in comp...
We examine how far fertility trends respond to family policies in OECD countries. In the light of th...
The current total fertility rate in France has been increasing over this last ten years and is has r...
Birth rates differ strongly across European states, despite the deep economic har-monisation process...
In Germany 1,41 children are born per women which results in a much lower birth-rate than in France....
Variations in fertility trends in developed countries : disparities and impact of policies supportin...
The current total fertility rate in France is around 1.9 children per woman. This is a relatively hi...
Hantrais (Linda). - The impact of Familiy Policy on Childbearing in France and the United Kingdom Fr...
Very few studies have explored the optimality properties of the "standard model" of fertility where ...
The Demographic Transition enabled the productivity advances of the Industrial Revolution to be chan...
In France, the intervention of the state in the private sphere has long been accepted as legitimate....
The past two decades inWestern European societies have been marked by a decline 10 in fertility rate...
There has been little empirical work evaluating the sensitivity of fertility to financial incentives...
The current total fertility rate in France has been rising over the last ten years and reached 1.98 ...
Among reasons being push forward to explain the relatively high level of fertility in France in comp...
We examine how far fertility trends respond to family policies in OECD countries. In the light of th...
The current total fertility rate in France has been increasing over this last ten years and is has r...
Birth rates differ strongly across European states, despite the deep economic har-monisation process...
In Germany 1,41 children are born per women which results in a much lower birth-rate than in France....
Variations in fertility trends in developed countries : disparities and impact of policies supportin...
The current total fertility rate in France is around 1.9 children per woman. This is a relatively hi...
Hantrais (Linda). - The impact of Familiy Policy on Childbearing in France and the United Kingdom Fr...
Very few studies have explored the optimality properties of the "standard model" of fertility where ...
The Demographic Transition enabled the productivity advances of the Industrial Revolution to be chan...
In France, the intervention of the state in the private sphere has long been accepted as legitimate....
The past two decades inWestern European societies have been marked by a decline 10 in fertility rate...