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Martin Dribe. Photo.

Martin Dribe

Professor

Martin Dribe. Photo.

Is it who you are or where you live? Community effects on net fertility at the onset of fertility decline: A multilevel analysis using Swedish micro-census data

Author

  • Martin Dribe
  • Sol Pia Juarez
  • Francesco Scalone

Summary, in English

This paper studies contextual effects on fertility at the onset of fertility decline in Sweden. We argue that the community exerts an influence on fertility when individuals belonging to a certain community are more similar to one another (within-area) in their reproductive behaviour than individuals living in another community (between-area). Our hypotheses are that community had a strong influence in the past but that it decreased over time as more individualistic values grew in importance. We expect that the community exerted a greater impact in the low socioeconomic groups as the elite were less constrained by proximity and, therefore, more exposed to new ideas crossing community borders. Using micro-census data from 1880, 1890, and 1900, we use multilevel analysis to estimate measures of intra-class correlation within areas. We measure net fertility by the number of own children under five living in the household to currently married women with their spouses present. Parish is used as proxy for community. Our results indicate that despite average differences in fertility across parishes, the correlation between individuals belonging to the same community is less than 2.5%, that is, only a negligible share of the number of children observed is attributable to true community effects. Contrary to our expectation, we do not find any substantial change over time. However, as expected, community has a greater impact in the low socioeconomic groups. Our findings suggest that it is who you are rather than where you live which explains fertility behaviour during the initial stages of the transition

Department/s

  • Centre for Economic Demography
  • Department of Economic History

Publishing year

2015

Language

English

Publication/Series

Population Space and Place

Volume

online: 15 Oct 2015

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

John Wiley & Sons Inc.

Topic

  • Social and Economic Geography
  • Economics and Business

Keywords

  • fertility transition
  • geographical differences
  • contextual effects

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1544-8452