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Journal ArticleDOI

Value of Children and the Framing of Fertility: Results from a Cross-cultural Comparative Survey in 10 Societies

Bernhard Nauck
- 01 Dec 2007 - 
- Vol. 23, Iss: 5, pp 615-629
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TLDR
In this article, a comprehensive model is specified, which accounts both for the variable efficiency of having children for the optimization of physical well-being and of social esteem of (potential) parents, and for variable rationality of fertility decisions.
Abstract
To overcome incomplete explanations of cross-cultural differences in fertility behaviour, three complementary approaches are systematically related to each other: the ‘demand’-based economic theory of fertility (ETF), a revised version of the ‘supply’-based ‘value-of-children’-approach (VOC) as a special theory of the general social theory of social production functions, and the framing theory of variable rationality. A comprehensive model is specified, which accounts both for the variable efficiency of having children for the optimization of physical well-being and of social esteem of (potential) parents, and for the variable rationality of fertility decisions. The model is tested with a data set, which comprises information on VOC and fertility of women within social settings of 10 societies (Peoples Republic of China, India, Indonesia, South Africa, Ghana, Israel, Palestine, Turkey, the Czech Republic, and Germany), using multivariate models with births of different parity as dependents. As empirical research both on ETF and VOC only exists for intra-societal comparisons, the simultaneous test in a cross-cultural context goes beyond the current state of fertility research. It provides evidence about the cross-cultural validity of the model, systematic effects of VOC on fertility, and changing rationality of fertility decisions in the demographic transition.

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Fertility in Advanced Societies: A Review of Research

TL;DR: This paper provides a review of fertility research in advanced societies, societies in which birth control is the default option, and summarizes how contemporary research has explained ongoing and expected fertility changes across time and space.
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Panel analysis of intimate relationships and family dynamics (pairfam): conceptual framework and design

TL;DR: The DFG-funded "Pair Analysis of Intimate Relationships and Family Dynamics" (pairfam) study as mentioned in this paper was initiated to provide an extended empirical basis for advances in family research.
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The Pains and Pleasures of Parenting: When, Why, and How Is Parenthood Associated With More or Less Well-Being?

TL;DR: It is proposed that parents are unhappy to the extent that they encounter relatively greater negative emotions, magnified financial problems, more sleep disturbance, and troubled marriages, when parents experience greater meaning in life, satisfaction of their basic needs, greater positive emotions, and enhanced social roles, they are met with happiness and joy.
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Parenthood and Life Satisfaction: Why Don't Children Make People Happy?

TL;DR: In a recent survey of the literature on the association between parenthood and subjective well-being, Hansen et al. as discussed by the authors investigated how financial and time costs of children act as suppressors of parents' life satisfaction.
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Attitudes, Norms and Perceived Behavioural Control: Explaining Fertility Intentions in Bulgaria

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors study fertility decision-making through timing parity-progression intentions and show that attitudes, norms and perceived behavioural control are more relevant than norms for higher parities.
References
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Posted Content

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