7 results on '"Billari, Francesco C."'
Search Results
2. Does broadband Internet affect fertility?
- Author
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Billari, Francesco C., Giuntella, Osea, and Stella, Luca
- Subjects
- *
HUMAN fertility , *BROADBAND communication systems , *PANEL analysis , *DIGITAL divide , *MOTHERHOOD , *SATISFACTION - Abstract
The spread of high-speed (broadband) Internet epitomizes the digital revolution. Using German panel data, we test whether the availability of broadband influences fertility choices in a low-fertility setting well known for the difficulty in combining work and family life. We exploit a strategy devised by Falck and colleagues to obtain causal estimates of the impact of broadband on fertility. We find positive effects of broadband availability on the fertility of highly educated women aged 25–45. We further confirm this result using county-level data on total fertility. We show that broadband access significantly increases the share of women reporting home- or part-time working. Furthermore, we find positive effects on time spent with children and overall life satisfaction. Our findings are consistent with the hypothesis that access to broadband allows highly educated women, but not the less educated, to reconcile career and motherhood, which may promote a 'digital divide' in fertility. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Changing Determinants of Low Fertility and Diffusion: a Spatial Analysis for Italy.
- Author
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Vitali, Agnese and Billari, Francesco C.
- Subjects
HUMAN fertility ,SPATIAL analysis (Statistics) ,REGRESSION (Civilization) ,SECULARIZATION ,IMMIGRANTS ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
Italy is a case study in lowest-low fertility. Its internal heterogeneity is substantial and changing over time. The paper has two main aims. First, it aims at investigating whether the theoretical framework offered by the diffusionist perspective to fertility transition could still be relevant in explaining fertility changes in contemporary advanced societies. Second, the paper aims at investigating if and how the associations between fertility and a series of indicators of secularisation, female occupation, contribution of fertility of immigrants, and economic development change across space and over time. We make use of geographically weighted regressions and spatial panel regressions to model explicitly spatial dependence in fertility among Italian provinces over the period between 1999 and 2010. Results show that spatial dependence in provincial fertility persists even after controlling for standard correlates of fertility, consistently with a diffusionist perspective. Further, the local association between fertility and its correlates is not homogeneous across provinces. The strength and in some cases also the direction of such associations vary spatially, suggesting that the determinants of low fertility change across space. Finally, the associations between fertility and its correlates change over time. Copyright © 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. The Italian Labour Force Survey to estimate fertility.
- Author
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Bordone, Valeria, Billari, Francesco C., and Zuanna, Gianpiero Dalla
- Subjects
LABOR supply ,LABOR market ,SOCIAL surveys ,HUMAN fertility ,DEMOGRAPHY - Abstract
The own-children method (OCM) applied to the Italian Labour Force Survey (ILFS) is an alternative way to give information on fertility for the years before the survey. By deriving children information and the population at risk on the basis of parents’ characteristics, a large-scale dataset for fertility analysis in Italy becomes available, also to reconstruct event histories. The quality assessment provided by comparing the total fertility rate (TFR) calculated on ILFS with the official regional and national TFRs by ISTAT gives us usable outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Approaching the Limit: Long-Term Trends in Late and Very Late Fertility.
- Author
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Billari, Francesco C., Kohler, Hans-Peter, Andersson, Gunnar, and Lundström, Hans
- Subjects
- *
REPRODUCTION , *REPRODUCTIVE technology , *FERTILITY , *PREGNANCY , *FIRST-born children , *FERTILITY decline , *HUMAN fertility ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
This article discusses how European women are historically bearing their first children later than ever before. In the United States and other countries, entry into parenthood is also seeing delays. Many experts argue that such fertility trends in developed countries are characterized by increasing, persistent, and arguably irreversible delays in childbearing in many socioeconomic conditions. Many of the informal age deadlines for childbearing are apparently being challenged and biological limits are being pushed. The article also presents information about the physiological aspects of late fertility and discusses the effect of new technologies on conception and pregnancy. Sweden's late and very late fertility is also examined.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. The Interrelations Between Cohabitation, Marriage and First Birth in Germany and Sweden.
- Author
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Baizán, Pau, Aassave, Arnstein, and Billari, Francesco C.
- Subjects
UNMARRIED couples ,MARRIAGE ,HUMAN fertility ,POPULATION ,PARENTHOOD ,FAMILIES - Abstract
We study the interrelationships between union-formation forms and fertility in Swedish and West German female cohorts born in 1949-1971. We apply simultaneous hazard models, permitting the presence of correlated unobserved heterogeneity. This method allows us to control for country-specific composition of the population with respect to several socio-economic variables, as well as with respect to unobserved factors jointly affecting childbearing and union formation behavior. Our results confirm that partnership formation and the transition to parenthood are partially interchangeable. Net of those selection effects, we find that the impact of being in a union on first birth is higher in Sweden than in Germany, in particular for cohabitation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
7. Advances in development reverse fertility declines.
- Author
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Myrskylä, Mikko, Kohler, Hans-Peter, and Billari, Francesco C.
- Subjects
HUMAN fertility ,POPULATION & society ,ECONOMIC development ,SOCIAL development ,AGE factors in human reproduction ,DEVELOPING countries ,ECONOMICS ,POPULATION - Abstract
During the twentieth century, the global population has gone through unprecedented increases in economic and social development that coincided with substantial declines in human fertility and population growth rates. The negative association of fertility with economic and social development has therefore become one of the most solidly established and generally accepted empirical regularities in the social sciences. As a result of this close connection between development and fertility decline, more than half of the global population now lives in regions with below-replacement fertility (less than 2.1 children per woman). In many highly developed countries, the trend towards low fertility has also been deemed irreversible. Rapid population ageing, and in some cases the prospect of significant population decline, have therefore become a central socioeconomic concern and policy challenge. Here we show, using new cross-sectional and longitudinal analyses of the total fertility rate and the human development index (HDI), a fundamental change in the well-established negative relationship between fertility and development as the global population entered the twenty-first century. Although development continues to promote fertility decline at low and medium HDI levels, our analyses show that at advanced HDI levels, further development can reverse the declining trend in fertility. The previously negative development–fertility relationship has become J-shaped, with the HDI being positively associated with fertility among highly developed countries. This reversal of fertility decline as a result of continued economic and social development has the potential to slow the rates of population ageing, thereby ameliorating the social and economic problems that have been associated with the emergence and persistence of very low fertility. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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