1st Edition

Squeezing Birth into Working Life Household Panel Data Analyses Comparing Germany, Great Britain, Sweden and The Netherlands

By Cécile Wetzels Copyright 2001
    190 Pages
    by Routledge

    190 Pages
    by Routledge

    This title was first published in 2001. Increasingly, young women throughout Europe educate themselves for a life-long labour market career. So, where does birth fit into a young woman's curriculum vitae? This book takes a welfare state comparative perspective on this issue, analyzing relevant macro policies from four countries whose political views on the combination of work and family differ, namely Germany, Britain, the Netherlands and Sweden. The effects of these macro policies on the micro economic labour market and fertility behaviour are also examined using household panel data from each country. For this purpose, all available information from the four countries has been organized into fertility and work histories on a month-to-month basis around the date of giving birth. Within the welfare state comparative framework, hypotheses on women's labour market transitions in connection with childbirth, women's share in joint family earnings around the birth of the first and the second child, the timing of having a first and subsequent child are derived from economic theory on human capital and labour supply.

    1. Introduction.  2. Breadwinner Ideology against Individual and Equal Role Sharing Ideology.  3. Creating Comparative Fertility and Work Files from Household Panel Data Sets.  4. Women's Labour Force Transitions in Connection with Childbirth.  5. Women's Share in Earnings Before and After the Birth of Children.  6. Paid Careers and the Timing and Spacing of Births in Germany, Great Britain and Sweden.  7. Optimal Age at Maternity in the Netherlands.  8. Summary.

    Biography

    Cecile Wetzels