being educated or in education: the impact of education on the timing of entry into parenthood...
Post on 28-Mar-2015
214 Views
Preview:
TRANSCRIPT
“Being Educated or in Education:
the Impact of Education on the Timing of Entry into Parenthood”
Dieter H. DemeyFaculty of Social and Political Sciences
Queens’ CollegeUniversity of Cambridge
United Kingdom
2
Structure of the presentation
1. Demographic background (1945-present)
2. Theoretical framework and previous empirical research
4. Data and methodology
5. Results
6. Conclusions
3. Hypotheses
3
1. Demographic background (1945-present) (1)
1. Postponement of the transition to parenthood
2. Increase in the degree of childlessness
Link between the postponement of first births and increasing childlessness:
are postponed first births fully recuperated?
degree of recuperation of first births?: births postponed are births foregone
Trends:
4
1. Demographic background (1945-present) (2)
age 25
age 30
age 35
age 45
0.00
0.20
0.40
0.60
0.80
1.00
1930 1935 1940 1945 1950 1955 1960 1965 1970 1975 1980
year of birth
pro
po
rtio
n w
ith
at
lea
st
on
e c
hild
England and Wales, 2006 (ONS, 2007)
5
2. Theoretical framework and previous empirical research (1)
Educational attainment is an important factor in explaining the timing of first births and change over time:
b) Sociologists:
c) Second demographic transition theory (e.g. Lesthaeghe, 1983, 1988):
a) Economic models of fertility (e.g. Becker, 1981): opportunity costs of childbearing and childrearing education ~ earning potential
incompatibility of motherhood and work education ~ labour market participation
secularisation and individuation
education ~ value orientations, preferences, aspirations
6
2. Theoretical framework and previous empirical research (2)
• Empirical research:
- However, results are dependent on whether educational activity and the time elapsed since leaving the educational system are taken into account:
positive relation between educational attainment and the timing of first births educational attainment -> delaying effect on the transition to parenthood
educational activity: effect of educational attainment becomes insignificant or reverses time elapsed since leaving education: reversed effect of educational attainment: catch-up effect
- Gender-specific effects?
7
3. Hypotheses (1)
1. Educational attainment:
2. Educational activity:
There is a positive effect of educational level on the timing of the first birth. In other words, the lower educated are expected to accelerate the entry into parenthood, while the higher educated are expected to postpone the entry into parenthood
There is a negative effect of enrolment in education on the rate of the entry into parenthood. In other words, the entry into parenthood will be postponed during the period of enrolment in education and will be accelerated once persons leave the educational system
8
3. Hypotheses (2)
3. The time elapsed since leaving education:
There is a positive relation between educational attainment and the rate of acceleration into parenthood after finishing education. In other words, the time interval between leaving education and entering parenthood is expected to decrease as the educational level increases
9
4. Data and methodology (1)
• British Household Panel Survey (BHPS)
• Waves 1 to 15 (1991-2006)
• Fertility: reconstructed first birth histories until the date of the last interview:
retrospective: fertility histories collected in wave 2
prospective: first birth observed during the panel
• Education: highest educational qualification and the date of exit from the educational system (first exit):
retrospective: employment histories collected in wave 2
prospective: exit observed during the panel
• Sample: women and men, birth cohorts 1930-1989, no missing information
10
4. Data and methodology (2)
• Discrete-time hazard model:
• Complementary log-log model (“cloglog”): discrete-time representation of a continuous-time proportional hazard model
first births are measured in monthly intervals
underlying process is in continuous time
• Risk set: age 14 until age 45
• Right-censoring:
• No left-censoring
month of occurrence of the first birth
or, at the date of the last interview / month 45th birthday
11
4. Data and methodology (3)
• Dependent variable: probability of a first birth
• Independent variables:
enrolment in education: time-varying dummy variable, 1 indicating enrolment, 0 otherwise
educational level: time-constant categorical variable with 6 categories
time since leaving education: time-varying categorical variable with 11 categories
• Final sample size women = 4968 / number of first births = 3164
• Final sample size men = 4666 / number of first births = 2468
12
5. Results (1)Modelling the probability of the first birth (complementary log-log model)
HR sig. HR sig. HR sig.Educational level
no QF / enrolled at last interview (ref. cat.)comp. school QF 0.66 *** 0.66 *** 0.77 ***post-comp. school QF (vocational) (16 onwards) 0.66 *** 0.65 *** 0.69 ***post-comp. school QF (academic) (16 onwards) 0.52 *** 0.54 *** 0.68 ***post-comp. school QF (vocational) (18 onwards) 0.58 *** 0.59 *** 0.71 ***post-comp. school QF (academic) (18 onwards) 0.38 *** 0.45 *** 0.66 ***
Enrolment in education (1=in education) -- 0.08 *** --
Time elapsed since leaving education0 (still enrolled, 1=in education) -- -- 0.12 ***0-2 years (ref. cat.) -- --2-4 years -- -- 1.63 ***4-6 years -- -- 2.39 ***6-8 years -- -- 4.25 ***8-10 years -- -- 4.91 ***10-12 years -- -- 5.33 ***12-14 years -- -- 4.91 ***14-16 years -- -- 4.60 ***16-18 years -- -- 3.80 ***18+ years -- -- 3.36 ***
women
13
5. Results (2)Modelling the probability of the first birth (complementary log-log model)
HR sig. HR sig. HR sig.Educational level
no QF / enrolled at last interview (ref. cat.)comp. school QF 0.83 *** 0.81 *** 0.88 **post-comp. school QF (vocational) (16 onwards) 1.14 1.10 1.09post-comp. school QF (academic) (16 onwards) 0.79 *** 0.77 *** 0.86 **post-comp. school QF (vocational) (18 onwards) 0.90 * 0.88 ** 0.96post-comp. school QF (academic) (18 onwards) 0.60 *** 0.63 *** 0.87 **
Enrolment in education (1=in education) -- 0.10 *** --
Time elapsed since leaving education0 (still enrolled, 1=in education) -- -- 0.28 ***0-2 years (ref. cat.) -- --2-4 years -- -- 1.85 ***4-6 years -- -- 3.02 ***6-8 years -- -- 4.42 ***8-10 years -- -- 6.34 ***10-12 years -- -- 7.51 ***12-14 years -- -- 6.09 ***14-16 years -- -- 5.87 ***16-18 years -- -- 5.21 ***18+ years -- -- 4.28 ***
men
14
5. Results (3): catch-up effect?
Modelling the probability of the first birth by separate age groups (complementary log-log model)
WomenHR sig. HR sig. HR sig. HR sig. HR sig.
Educational levelno QF / enrolled at last interview (ref. cat.)comp. school QF 0.86 0.56 *** 0.56 *** 1.01 1.21post-comp. school QF (vocational) (16 onwards) -- 0.49 *** 0.57 *** 1.15 1.24post-comp. school QF (academic) (16 onwards) 0.17 * 0.36 *** 0.47 *** 0.94 1.20post-comp. school QF (vocational) (18 onwards) 0.57 0.46 *** 0.48 *** 0.96 1.30post-comp. school QF (academic) (18 onwards) 0.47 0.24 *** 0.29 *** 0.81 * 1.40 *
Enrolment in education (1=in education) 0.10 *** 0.07 *** 0.10 *** 0.12 *** --
31-4514-17 17-20 21-25 26-30
15
5. Results (4): catch-up effect?
Modelling the probability of the first birth by separate age groups (complementary log-log model)
MenHR sig. HR sig. HR sig. HR sig. HR sig.
Educational levelno QF / enrolled at last interview (ref. cat.)comp. school QF 0.32 1.59 ** 0.73 *** 0.84 1.04post-comp. school QF (vocational) (16 onwards) -- 0.81 0.95 1.26 1.40post-comp. school QF (academic) (16 onwards) -- 0.33 *** 0.57 *** 0.93 1.47 **post-comp. school QF (vocational) (18 onwards) 0.71 0.55 *** 0.63 *** 1.11 1.40 **post-comp. school QF (academic) (18 onwards) -- 0.21 *** 0.23 *** 0.81 ** 1.61 ***
Enrolment in education (1=in education) 0.68 0.05 *** 0.09 *** 0.12 * 0.31
14-17 17-20 21-25 26-30 31-45
16
6. Conclusions (1)
• Educational attainment
• Enrolment in education
strong and positive effect of educational attainment on the timing of first births
postponement effect is stronger among women than among men
differences between groups of education are larger among women than among men
strong and negative effect of enrolment in education on the rate of entry into parenthood effect of educational level on the hazard of first births does not change (no pure mechanical effect of educational attainment)
17
6. Conclusions (2)
• The time elapsed since leaving education
monotonous increase in the rate of entry into parenthood until 10 to 12 years after leaving the educational system
effect of educational level becomes smaller
effect is stronger among men than among women
catch-up effect among the higher educated after age 30
top related