Fertility and Media Narratives of the Economy: Evidence From Italian News Coverage

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Abstract

We argue that media-conveyed economic narratives are crucial for under-standing contemporary fertility dynamics, net of objective economic constraints. Individuals use these narratives to project themselves into an actionable imagined future and make decisions that may be relatively independent from their actual economic situation. We test this hypothesis for Italy by combining individual-level data from the 2009 and 2016 releases of the nationally representative Family and Social Subjects Survey with Media Tenor data on the coverage of the economy in the evening newscast of Italian TV’s most-viewed channel (Rai 1). Our findings reveal that both the incidence and tone of news reports on the state of the economy are associated with fertility behavior. An increase in the number of negative economic news items is negatively associated with fertility, whereas an increase in positive items is positively correlated with fertility. Interestingly, when positive news items outnumber negative ones, an increase in the share of economic reports is positively associated with fertility. These associations are statistically significant and substantially relevant, net of traditional individual and contextual socioeconomic fertility correlates. Overall, our findings bolster the claim that media-conveyed narratives of the economy influence fertility behaviors.

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Guetto, R., Morabito, M. F., Vollbracht, M., & Vignoli, D. (2023). Fertility and Media Narratives of the Economy: Evidence From Italian News Coverage. Demography, 60(2), 607–630. https://doi.org/10.1215/00703370-10607928

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