Abstract
Drawing upon a sample of 638 mothers aged 18 to 40, with at least some marital work experience, significant associations were found between the extent, kind, and timing of employment and a series of family formation variables. Generally lower fertility, longer first birth intervals, and earlier use of birth control were associated with the longest work durations, the highest status jobs, and work before the birth of the first child. The data failed, however, to differentiate desired family size. © 1976 Population Association of America.
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CITATION STYLE
Theodore Groat, H., Workman, R. L., & Neal, A. G. (1976). Labor force participation and family formation: A study of working mothers. Demography, 13(1), 115–125. https://doi.org/10.2307/2060424
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