Effects of fertility on women’sworking status
Abstract
As in other developing countries, Peru’s demographic transition is
well underway. Concurrently, women’s labor market participation
and employment rates have substantially increased. In this paper we
estimate the causal effect that the reduction in fertility rates has on
women’s employment using instrumental variables already tested in
developed countries—twins in the first birth and the sex composition
of the two oldest children. We also analyze the heterogeneity of the
effects along three lines: marriage status of the mother, age of the
first (second) child, and mother’s level of education. We find strong
effects of fertility. According to our results, 27 percent of the total
increase in women’s rate of employment between 1993 and 2007 can
be attributed to the reduction in fertility rates. This is a considerable
magnitude, more than four times as large as the estimate for US by
Jacobsen et al. (1999). Effects are largest in women with children 2
years old or younger and decline inversely as the first child increases
in age, but are still significant when he or she reaches 10. Effects also
vary with the mother’s education level, tending to be stronger when
women have more education. Finally, these effects are smaller for
married women than for all women.