Production, Reproduction, and Education: Women, Children, and Work in a British Perspective

This article reviews findings of studies by the author and colleagues on relationships between women's work and the reproduction of the British population based on data for female birth cohorts 1922-70. The studies address three questions: (1) How do children affect women's paid work and lifetime earnings? (2) How does women's employment affect the quantity of children born? (3) How does women's employment affect the "quality" of children? The answers are affected by the woman's educational attainment. On question 1, childrearing may often halve lifetime earnings, but seldom for the well educated. By contrast, any effects from employment to childbearing are most apparent in the late motherhood of the well educated. Child quality, as assessed by indicators of child development, benefits from maternal education and suffers little from maternal employment. The economic advantages for children in dual-career families are thus unabated. A widening gulf between mothers will tend to polarize the life chances of their children, unless there are more options to combine employment and childrearing, especially including good-quality child care for those who cannot afford the market price. Education is a powerful influence, but does not alone solve all issues of equity, whether between families or between sexes. Copyright 2002 by The Population Council, Inc..

[1]  S. Parsons,et al.  Competence in the face of adversity: the influence of early family environment and long-term consequences , 2002 .

[2]  A. Mcculloch,et al.  Child development and family resources: Evidence from the second generation of the 1958 British birth cohort , 2002 .

[3]  A. Mcculloch,et al.  Neighbourhood and family influences on the cognitive ability of children in the British National Child Development Study. , 2001, Social science & medicine.

[4]  S. Neuman Unequal Pay for Women and Men: Evidence from the British Birth Cohort Studies , 2001 .

[5]  S. Gustafsson,et al.  Optimal age at motherhood. Theoretical and empirical considerations on postponement of maternity in Europe , 2001 .

[6]  M. N. Bhrolcháin ‘Divorce Effects’ and Causality in the Social Sciences , 2001 .

[7]  R. Wiggins,et al.  Internalising and externalising children's behaviour problems in Britain and the US: relationships to family resources , 2000 .

[8]  P. McDonald Gender Equity in Theories of Fertility Transition , 2000 .

[9]  C. Ruhm Parental Employment and Child Cognitive Development , 2000, The Journal of Human Resources.

[10]  K. Rake,et al.  Women's Incomes over the Lifetime , 2000 .

[11]  H. Joshi,et al.  Forgone income and motherhood: What do recent British data tell u? , 2000, Population studies.

[12]  R. Wiggins,et al.  Diverse family living situations and child development: a multi-level analysis comparing longitudinal evidence from Britain and The United States , 1999 .

[13]  Katherin E. Ross,et al.  Public Childcare, Parental Leave, and Employment , 1999 .

[14]  P. Paci,et al.  The wages of motherhood: better or worse? , 1999 .

[15]  S. Dex,et al.  Careers and motherhood: policies for compatibility , 1999 .

[16]  H. Joshi The opportunity costs of childbearing: More than mothers’ business , 1998, Journal of population economics.

[17]  B. Pfau-Effinger Gender cultures and the gender arrangement—a theoretical framework for cross‐national gender research , 1998 .

[18]  Katherin E. Ross,et al.  Supporting the Employment of Mothers: Policy Variation Across Fourteen Welfare States , 1997 .

[19]  J. Chesnais,et al.  Fertility, Family, and Social Policy in Contemporary Western Europe , 1996 .

[20]  J. Hobcraft,et al.  Fertility in England and Wales: a fifty-year perspective. , 1996, Population studies.

[21]  Heather Joshi,et al.  Employment after Childbearing: A Survival Analysis , 1996 .

[22]  D. Coleman,et al.  Europe's Population in the 1990s , 1996 .

[23]  A. Dale,et al.  Combining Employment with Childcare: An Escape From Dependence? , 1996, Journal of Social Policy.

[24]  S. Dex,et al.  A Widening Gulf among Britain's Mothers , 1996 .

[25]  S. Jenkins,et al.  Modelling domestic work time , 1995 .

[26]  H. Joshi,et al.  Employment after childbearing in post-war Britain: cohort-study evidence on contrasts within and across generations. , 1993, European sociological review.

[27]  M. Murphy The contraceptive pill and women's employment as factors in fertility change in Britain 1963-1980: a challenge to the conventional view. , 1993, Population studies.

[28]  B. Hoem The Compatibility of Employment and Childbearing in Contemporary Sweden , 1993 .

[29]  H. Joshi The Cash Opportunity Costs of Childbearing: An Approach To Estimation Using British Data , 1990 .

[30]  C Stevens-Simon,et al.  Teenage Pregnancy , 1989 .

[31]  J. Ermisch Economic Influences On Birth Rates , 1988, National Institute Economic Review.

[32]  J. Ermisch Purchased child care, optimal family size and mother's employment Theory and econometric analysis , 1988, Journal of population economics.

[33]  R. Lesthaeghe,et al.  Cultural Dynamics and Economic Theories of Fertility Change , 1988 .

[34]  T. Espenshade,et al.  Childbearing and Wives' Foregone Earnings , 1988 .

[35]  H. Joshi,et al.  The Next Birth and the Labour Market: A Dynamic Model of Births in England and Wales , 1987 .

[36]  S. Owen Women and Employment: A Lifetime Perspective , 1985 .

[37]  Gary S. Becker,et al.  Human Capital, Effort, and the Sexual Division of Labor , 1985, Journal of Labor Economics.

[38]  K. Davis Wives and work: the sex role revolution and its consequences. , 1984 .

[39]  M. P. Ward,et al.  The Emergence of Countercyclical U.S. Fertility , 1979 .

[40]  R. Mcnabb The Labour Force Participation of Married Women , 1977 .

[41]  H. Joshi,et al.  Women's Incomes over a Synthetic Lifetime , 2002 .

[42]  Carol Propper,et al.  Centre for Analysis of Social Exclusion , 2001 .

[43]  H. Joshi,et al.  The price of parenthood and the value of children , 2000 .

[44]  P. Paci,et al.  How Unequally Has Equal Pay Progressed since the 1970s? A Study of Two British Cohorts , 1999 .

[45]  Ted Bergstrom,et al.  Economics in a Family , 1999 .

[46]  H. Joshi,et al.  Gender and income inequality in the UK 1968–90: the feminization of earnings or of poverty? , 1998 .

[47]  E. Drew,et al.  Women, Work and the Family in Europe , 1998 .

[48]  C. Callender Maternity rights and benefits in Britain, 1996 , 1997 .

[49]  B Dankmeyer,et al.  Long run opportunity-costs of children according to education of the mother in the Netherlands , 1996, Journal of population economics.

[50]  T. David Who Pays for the Kids? Gender and the Structures of Constraint , 1995 .

[51]  H. Joshi,et al.  Double burden or double blessing? Employment, motherhood and mortality in the Longitudinal Study of England and Wales. , 1994, Social science & medicine.

[52]  A. Heitlinger Women's equality, demography, and public policies , 1993 .

[53]  E. Ferri Life at 33 : The fifth follow-up of the National Child Development Study , 1993 .

[54]  H. Joshi Changing Roles of Women in the British Labour Market and the Family , 1990 .

[55]  H. Joshi,et al.  Forecasting the female labour force in Britain , 1988 .

[56]  Shirley Dex,et al.  Women's Occupational Mobility: A Lifetime Perspective , 1987 .

[57]  M. Ní Bhrolcháin The interpretation and role of work-associated accelerated childbearing in post-war Britain. , 1986, European journal of population = Revue europeenne de demographie.