Emotional Variation and Fertility Behavior

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Abstract

Emotional influences on fertility behaviors are an understudied topic that may offer a clear explanation of why many couples choose to have children even when childbearing is not economically rational. With setting-specific measures of the husband-wife emotional bond appropriate for large-scale population research matched with data from a long-term panel study, we have the empirical tools to provide a test of the influence of emotional factors on contraceptive use to limit fertility. This article presents those tests. We use long-term, multilevel community and family panel data to demonstrate that the variance in levels of husband-wife emotional bond is significantly associated with their subsequent use of contraception to avert births. We discuss the wide-ranging implications of this intriguing new result.

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APA

Axinn, W. G., Ghimire, D. J., & Smith-Greenaway, E. (2017). Emotional Variation and Fertility Behavior. Demography, 54(2), 437–458. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13524-017-0555-5

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