Página 22 - ANAlitika9

Versión de HTML Básico

Andrea Molina Vera
Analítika, Revista de análisis estadístico, (2015), Vol. 9
18
from 2 to 3 children but do not refer to other increases in fertility as in going from 0 to 1
child.
References
Aguero, J. and Marks, M. (2008). Motherhood and Female Labor Force Participation:
Evidence from Infertility Shocks.
American Economic Review: Papers and Proceedings
,
98 (2):500–504.
Ahn, N. and Mira, P. (2002). A Note on the Changing Relationship between Fertility and
Female Employment Rates in Developed Countries.
Journal of Population Economics
, 15
(4):667–682.
Angrist, J. (2004). Treatment Effect Heterogeneity in Theory and Practice.
The Economic
Journal,
, 114:C52–C83.
Angrist, J. and Evans, W. (1998). Children and Their Parents’ Labor Supply:evidence from
Exogenous Variation in Family Size.
The American Economic Review
, 88 (3):450–477.
Bargain, O., Gonz´alez, L., Keane, C., and Ozcan, B. (2012). Female labor supply and
divorce: New evidence from Ireland.
European Economic Review
, 56(8):1675–1691.
Bronars, S. and Grogger, J. (1994). The Economic Consequences of Unwed Mother-
hood:Using Twin Births as a Natural Experiment.
American Economic Review
, 84
(5):1141–1156.
Browning, M. (1992). Children and Household Economic Behavior.
Journal of Economic
Literature
, XXX:1434–1475.
Cristia, J. (2008). The Effect of a First Child on Female Labor Supply: Evidence from
Women Seeking Fertility Services.
Journal of Human Resources
, 43 (3):487–510.
Cruces, G. and Galiani, S. (2007). Fertility and Female Labor Supply in Latin America:
New Causal Evidence.
Labour Economics
, 14 (3):565–573.
Delpiano, C. (2012). Can we still learn something from the relationship between Fertility
and Mother’s Employment? Evidence from Developing Countries.
Demography
, 9 (1).
Gronau, R. (1973). The Effect of Children on the Housewife’s Value of Time.
Journal of
Political Economy. Part II
, 81 (2):S168–99.
Hotz, J., McElroy, S., and Sanders, S. (2005). Teenage Childbearing and its Life Cycle
Consequences Exploiting a Natural Experiment.
Journal of Human Resources
, 40 (3):683–
715.
12