Alternative theories of the relationship of schooling and work to family formation: evidence from Mexico.

D P Lindstrom, C Brambila Paz
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引用次数: 30

Abstract

Role incompatibility, education as an investment in human capital, and schooling as a transformative experience are three mechanisms that link women's education to the timing of marriage and first birth. We simultaneously evaluate these different explanations using retrospective life history data for two cohorts of Mexican women collected in a nationally representative sample. Our analyses provide evidence in support of all three hypotheses. While in school young women are at a substantially lower risk of marriage and of a first birth. We find no evidence that women leave school to enter into unions nor do we find evidence that the effect of being a student diminishes with age. Women who work for a wage are also at a lower risk of marriage and a first birth. Once we control for student and employment status, the direct effects of cumulative education on family formation are relatively modest, although cumulative education is strongly associated with positive attitudes towards women's work and a significant increase in the likelihood of premarital and postmarital employment.

学校教育、工作与家庭形成关系的另类理论:来自墨西哥的证据。
角色不相容、作为人力资本投资的教育和作为变革经验的上学是将妇女教育与结婚和生育时间联系起来的三个机制。我们同时评估了这些不同的解释,使用回顾性的生活史数据,收集了两组墨西哥妇女在全国代表性的样本。我们的分析提供了支持这三个假设的证据。在上学期间,年轻女性结婚和生育第一胎的风险大大降低。我们没有发现任何证据表明女性离开学校加入工会,也没有发现任何证据表明学生的影响会随着年龄的增长而减弱。为工资而工作的女性结婚和生育第一胎的风险也较低。一旦我们控制了学生和就业状况,累积教育对家庭形成的直接影响相对较小,尽管累积教育与对妇女工作的积极态度以及婚前和婚后就业可能性的显着增加密切相关。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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