Author:
Aldieri Luigi,Paolo Vinci Concetto
Abstract
PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to analyze the correlation between the educational level and the number of children in Italy, where a very low fertility rate may be observed.Design/methodology/approachSince the number of children ever born is a count variable, Poisson regression is the suitable statistical procedure used to conduct the empirical analysis. First, the authors estimate the correlation between the female's education and her number of children, and then the authors use also partner's education to take into account the family dimension. Furthermore, in the context of fertility, zero observations might be due either to the choice not to have children, or to the impossibility of becoming a mother. For this reason, the authors adopt also a more appropriate tool, that is a zero‐inflated Poisson regression.FindingsFrom the empirical results, a significant negative correlation may be observed between the level of education and the number of children.Originality/valueThere are other studies in the literature focusing on the correlation between female participation rate and her fertility rate in the Italian case. In those frameworks, the education variable is usually considered as a control variable. The paper's contribution to the literature is twofold: on one hand the authors develop a theoretical model giving an intuition reason of mechanism underlying the fertility behaviour of families; on the other hand, the authors implement more appropriate empirical models to test for this hypothesis, taking education as the main variable.
Subject
General Social Sciences,Economics and Econometrics
Reference13 articles.
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3. Aldieri, L., Barone, A. and Vinci, C.P. (2010), “Education and second birth risks in Italy”, Rivista Internazionale di Scienze Sociali, Vol. 118.
4. Black, S.E., Devereux, P.J. and Salvanes, K.G. (2008), “Staying in the classroom and out of the maternity ward? The effect of compulsory schooling laws on teenage births”, Economic Journal, Vol. 118 No. 530.
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