nep-dem New Economics Papers
on Demographic Economics
Issue of 2024‒09‒30
four papers chosen by
Héctor Pifarré i Arolas, University of Wisconsin


  1. Motherhood and Domestic Violence: A Longitudinal Study Using Population- Wide Administrative Data By Bergvall, Sanna; Rodriguez-Planas, Nuria
  2. The Impact of Delaying Early School Tracking on Fertility and Marriage Outcomes By Serena Canaan
  3. Gender norms and partnership dissolution following involuntary job loss in Germany By Rishabh Tyagi; Peter Eibich; Vegard Skirbekk
  4. DemoGravity: World Population and Trade in the 21st Century By Steven Brakman; Tristan Kohl; Charles van Marewijk; Charles van Marrewijk

  1. By: Bergvall, Sanna (Department of Economics, School of Business, Economics and Law, Göteborg University); Rodriguez-Planas, Nuria (Queens College)
    Abstract: Most empirical studies indicate that becoming a mother is an augmenting factor for the perpetration of intimate partner violence (IPV). Using rich population-wide hospital records data from Sweden, we conduct a stacked DiD analysis comparing the paths of women two years before and after the birth of their first child with same-age women who are several quarters older when giving birth to their first child and find that, in contrast to the consensus view, violence sharply decreases with pregnancy and motherhood. This decline has both a short-term and longer-term component, with the temporary decline in IPV covering most of the pregnancy until the child is 6 months old, mimicking a temporary decrease in hospital visits for alcohol abuse by the children’s fathers. The more persistent decline is riven by women who leave the relationship after the birth of the child. Our evidence is not supportive of alternative echanisms including suspicious hospitalizations, an overall reduction in hospital visits or selection in seeking medical care, mothers’ added value as the main nurturer, or mothers’ drop in relative earnings within the household. Our findings suggest the need to push for public health awareness campaigns underscoring the risk of victimization associated with substance abuse and to also provide women with more support to identify and leave a violent relationship.
    Keywords: motherhood; stacked difference-in-differences model; event study; individual fixed effects; administrative longitudinal records data; population-wide estimates
    JEL: J12 J13
    Date: 2024–09–03
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:hhs:gunwpe:0844
  2. By: Serena Canaan (Simon Fraser University)
    Abstract: This paper studies how the type of education pursued at an early age affects family formation. I focus on a French reform that delayed the age of which students were tracked into either general or vocational education from age 11 to age 13. For the most part, tracking was replaced with grouping students into classrooms based on ability, but within a common general education curriculum. Using a regression discontinuity design, I show that the reform increased the likelihood of attaining a technical rather than a vocational degree, especially for individuals from low socioeconomic backgrounds. This indicates that the reform led to an increase in the quality of education. I further find that the reform increased completed fertility for individuals from low socioeconomic backgrounds, particularly women. In the marriage market, the reform changed the characteristics of women’s partners without impacting marriage, cohabitation, or divorce rates. Specifically, women were more likely to have partners who were in high-skilled occupations and who were closer to their own ages. Taken together, these findings highlight that delaying early school tracking has significant consequences for family formation.
    Keywords: tracking, returns to education, fertility, marriage
    JEL: I21 I28 J24
    Date: 2024–08
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:upj:weupjo:24-403
  3. By: Rishabh Tyagi (Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research, Rostock, Germany); Peter Eibich (Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research, Rostock, Germany); Vegard Skirbekk (Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research, Rostock, Germany)
    Abstract: We study the impact of job loss on the risk of separation among German couples. We focus on job losses due to plant closures and involuntary dismissals as a source of variation that is likely to be independent of other individual risk factors for partnership dissolution. We use panel data from the German Socio-Economic Panel Study (1986–2019) for persons aged 20-65. We use event study design and propensity score matching combined with the difference-in-differences approach to analyse the effects of involuntary job loss on the likelihood of divorce or separation within three years. First, in our event study design, we find an increase in the probability of union dissolution in the year following job loss by around two percentage points (ppts). In our matching design combined with the difference-in-differences approach, union dissolution risk increases by 2.12 ppts for our treatment group compared to our control group within three years of the job loss. This increase in union dissolution risk is slightly higher in the case of male job loss (2.23 ppts) than for job loss among women (1.64 ppts) over three years compared to those not exposed to involuntary job loss. We analyse differences between East and West Germany and between migrants from different countries of origin to examine the role of gender norms. Gender norms in the place of origin do not seem to explain the increased union dissolution risk. However, the individual-level gender norms based on males’ share of home production activities in the couple over the years show an increased risk of union dissolution for the traditional half and no effect for the liberal half of the men losing their jobs. The effect of involuntary job loss on union dissolution risk is mediated by declining family life satisfaction, males’ share of hours spent on home production and lower household income for the person experiencing involuntary job loss.
    Keywords: Germany, dismissal, division of labor, divorce, economic demography
    JEL: J1 Z0
    Date: 2024
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:dem:wpaper:wp-2024-027
  4. By: Steven Brakman; Tristan Kohl; Charles van Marewijk; Charles van Marrewijk
    Abstract: The availability and composition of labor is fundamental for the structure of international trade. This points towards the importance of demographic transitions that affect trade through, for example, changing capital-labor ratios, urbanization dynamics, or changes in the composition of demand over the life cycle of individuals. Key in this respect is the so-called demographic dividend, which is the potential economic growth stemming from lower dependency ratios. We use the gravity model to link long-run changes of the demographic dividend to changes in the level of world trade for the 21st century. All the scenarios that we distinguish point towards the same conclusion: Compared to the current situation, North America and Europe will no longer be the center of global trade in 2100 due to their aging populations. In contrast, South Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa will experience a substantial increase in their share of world trade throughout the remainder of this century, while the impact of the demographic drag facing China will be most pronounced around 2060.
    Keywords: demographic transition, trade, income, gravity model
    JEL: F10 J11 O11
    Date: 2024
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:ces:ceswps:_11262

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