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Natives and Migrants’ Childbearing during the Great Recession. A Comparison between Italy and Sweden

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posted on 2019-05-23, 16:29 authored by Giammarco Alderotti, Eleonora MussinoEleonora Mussino, Chiara ComolliChiara Comolli
Abstract: This study contributes to the empirical research on the fertility decline registered in many European countries in the aftermath of the Great Recession adopting a comparative perspective. More specifically, the paper explores childbearing behavior during the crisis across three dimensions of socioeconomic vulnerability: migration background, labor market uncertainty and country context. We compare childbearing behavior among native and migrant women with different recent occupational histories in two countries: Sweden and Italy. Using the most recent available data, respectively the Swedish population registers and the Italian Labor Force Survey, we investigate the change in the probability of having a(nother) child between the pre-crisis (2007-09) and the crisis period (2010-12). Results suggest that, during the initial phase of the Great Recession, the probability of having a child decreases for migrants with unstable careers or low skilled occupations more than for natives. However, relevant differences between the two countries in the latter associations emerge.

Funding

European Union Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme / ERC Grant Agreement No 725961 (EU‐FER project “Economic Uncertainty and Fertility in Europe,” PI: Daniele Vignoli)

The Linnaeus Center on Social Policy and Family Dynamics in Europe - Spade (grant registration number 349-2007-8701)

The Swedish Research Council for Health, Working life and Welfare (FORTE), grant number 2016-07105 and 2018-00310

The Swedish Initiative for Research on Microdata in Social Science and Medical Sciences (SIMSAM), grant 340-2013-5164.

History

ISSN

2002-617X

Publication date

2019-05-23