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Oztunc, Hakan; Oo, Zar Chi; Serin, Zehra Vildan – Educational Sciences: Theory and Practice, 2015
This study examines the extent to which women's education affects long-term economic growth in the Asia Pacific region. It focuses on the time period between 1990 and 2010, using data collected in randomly selected Asia Pacific countries: Bangladesh, Cambodia, China, India, Indonesia, Lao PDR, Malaysia, Myanmar, Philippines, Thailand, and Vietnam.…
Descriptors: Womens Education, Economic Development, Correlation, Foreign Countries

Butz, William P.; Ward, Michael P. – American Economic Review, 1979
This model emphasizes the distinction between male and female earnings and the distinction between families with employed wives and those without as they affect the fertility rate. (Author/IRT)
Descriptors: Birth Rate, Economic Factors, Employed Women, Models

Cramer, James C. – American Sociological Review, 1980
Considers multicollinearity in nonrecursive models, misspecification of models, discrepancies between attitudes and behavior, and differences between static and dynamic models as explanations for contradictory information on the causal relationship between fertility and female employment. Finds that initially fertility affects employment but that,…
Descriptors: Birth Rate, Data Analysis, Employed Women, Income

Ewer, Phyllis A.; And Others – Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1979
Investigates causal dynamics underlying the negative relationship between wife's employment and family size. Results indicate that during early stages of marriage and family building the presence of young children consistently exerts a strong negative effect on wife's employment. The effects from wife's employment to her subsequent fertility are…
Descriptors: Birth Rate, Careers, Developmental Stages, Employed Women

Scanzoni, John – Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1979
Explores the connections between women's employment and fertility control. The point is made that these are both ongoing processes, intersecting and mutually reinforcing each other. The correlation between work/nonwork and family size is less significant than links between work-consistency and fertility control patterns which enhance that…
Descriptors: Birth Rate, Careers, Employed Parents, Employed Women

Austin, Roy L; And Others – Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior, 1992
Used trend analysis of suicide rate and female/male suicide ratios from 1950 to 1984 and regression of ratio on educational attainment, labor force participation, fertility, and divorce rates to examine explanations for rate changes. General anomie explanation of female suicide trends was supported for middle-aged females; conjugal anomie…
Descriptors: Birth Rate, Divorce, Educational Attainment, Employed Women

Thornton, Arland; Camburn, Donald – Psychology of Women Quarterly, 1979
The 1970 National Fertility Study was used to investigate relationships between sex role attitudes and the childbearing and labor force participation of women. It was found that the most crucial aspect of working and fertility was the extent to which the woman identified the female role as that of housewife and homemaker. (Author)
Descriptors: Attitudes, Birth Rate, Employed Women, Family (Sociological Unit)
Wolfe, Barbara – 1977
The effect of more education for women on their fertility behavior is examined in this paper through the use of data from the National Bureau of Economic Research/Thorndike-Hagen sample (NBERTH) and a comparable group from the National Longitudinal Survey. The NBER-TH data are longitudinal 25-year histories of 5,083 white males and their families.…
Descriptors: Birth Rate, Contraception, Educational Background, Educational Trends
Welds, Kathryn – 1977
A group of 590 female M.D.'s, Ph.D.'s, lawyers, and artists between ages 30 and 40 completed a mailed questionnaire including an anxiety scale (State-Trait Anxiety Inventory), a sex role questionnaire (Personal Attributes Questionnaire), a measure of ego development (Inventory of Psychosocial Development), and an Attitudes Toward Women Scale along…
Descriptors: Adult Development, Birth Rate, Employed Women, Family (Sociological Unit)
Austin, Gilbert R.; Dittman, Laura – 1975
This article discusses the move toward greater equality of educational opportunity in Scandinavia with particular emphasis on early childhood education. The increasing demand for preschool education in Denmark, Finland, Norway and Sweden is related to low birth rates together with increased employment of women and the general demand for equality…
Descriptors: Birth Rate, Cross Cultural Studies, Early Childhood Education, Employed Women
Sweet, James A. – 1979
Demographic data for Mexican American women and men, displayed in 30 tables accompanied by summaries, indicate changes in the allocation of time between the ages of 18 and 29 over 17 year period from 1960 to 1976. Trends for Mexican American women indicate person years spent single changed from 3.4 in 1960 to 3.6 in 1976, with a sharp increase in…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Birth Rate, Demography, Employed Women
Calhoun, Charles A.; Espenshade, Thomas J. – 1986
This report combines the techniques of multistate life table analysis with the human capital theory of wages to derive new estimates of the impact of children on hours of market work and earnings for American women aged 15 to 55 years old. The impact of fertility on female labor force behavior is analyzed, and opportunity expenditures (the money…
Descriptors: Birth Rate, Blacks, Educational Attainment, Employed Parents

Bahr, Stephen J., Ed. – Journal of Family Issues, 1982
Examines, in eight articles, changes in family economics. Studied effects of low income on young womens' high school completion, impact of negative income tax on children, moonlighting husbands, wives and husband's housework, relationship between human capital and fertility, household expenditure patterns, and cost of housewives' lost work…
Descriptors: Birth Rate, Consumer Economics, Economic Factors, Educational Attainment
Bean, Frank D.; And Others – 1982
This paper considers the effects of fertility on the labor supply of Cuban, Mexican, and Puerto Rican women in the United States. Drawing on the notion of "role incompatibility"--the degree to which the joint provision of child care and work are in conflict--the study examines whether having characteristics that increase the likelihood…
Descriptors: Birth Rate, Cubans, Employed Women, Females
De Tray, Dennis – 1978
This report contains the results of two closely related research projects designed to yield information on social and economic factors that influence the number of children couples have and the amount of schooling those children receive. Both projects are based on the same underlying theory of family formation and behavior and both use the same…
Descriptors: Birth Rate, Children, Economic Factors, Economics
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