Gender Equality and Fertility in Sweden: A Study on the Impact of the Father’s Uptake of Parental Leave on Continued Childbearing
Ann-Zofie Duvander, Statistics Sweden
Gunnar Andersson, Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research
In Sweden, the birth of a child induces the right to more than one year of paid parental leave that can be shared between the parents. This paper examines the relationship between the father’s and the mother’s respective use of such leave and the continued childbearing of a couple. Our investigation is based on an event-history analysis of the longitudinal information on registered parental-leave use and childbearing of all intact unions in Sweden during 1988-99. We expect an extended paternal involvement in childrearing to be positively associated with continued childbearing since it makes family building more compatible with the mother’s labor-force participation. In addition, it is likely to signal a higher interest of the father for continued family building. Around 85 percent of fathers take some leave but in most cases episodes are brief. We find a positive effect of a father’s moderately long leave on a couple’s childbearing propensity.
See paper
Presented in Session 172: Shifts in Gendered Power and Fertility Consequences