Title: Early and late motherhood: socioeconomic antecedents and consequences
 1Early and late motherhood socio-economic 
antecedents and consequences
Sub-brand to go here
-  Heather Joshi 
-  
- Conference on Economics and Demography 
- NIESR November 5 2008 
CLS is an ESRC Resource Centre based at the 
Institute of Education 
 2Outline
- Economic and social significance of the timing of 
 first birth
- Aggregate trends in routine statistics 
- Disaggregate Trends 
- Determinants of Timing 
- Consequence of Timing for children
31.The timing of childbearing
- The age at which childbearing starts is key 
 driver of contemporary demographic change. No
 second births can occur before the first  and in
 UK they usually do follow.
- While progression to the first and second birth 
 have been relatively stable, the change in the
 age of initiation has brought about fluctuations
 in the period fertility rate  tempo being more
 volatile that quantum  and an important
 determinant in fluctuations in the age structure
 of children.
- Delay also tends to reduce eventual family size 
 and the rate of population growth.
- Delayed motherhood is not socially neutral, but 
 affects different social groups.
- The fact that it had not involved everyone is 
 reflected in UKs still relatively high teenage
 fertility, which in turn has kept British
 fertility above the European average.
42. Trends in the First Birth
- Motherhood becoming later and (somewhat) less 
 frequent
-  women born 1900 
 lt70
-  born 1940 
 ca 90
-  born 1960 
 ca 80
- But since the 1970 generation, motherhood is 
 starting later.
- Increasing childlessness probably not all 
 intended
5A period perspective on postponement
Average age at first birth within marriage and 
all outside marriage, EW 1958-2004 
 6Births outside marriage, mostly to younger women 
 7Entry to motherhood in post-war Britain, by 
cohort  year of womans own birth true birth 
order 
 8Age by which successive quintiles of the whole 
cohort had entered motherhood 
 93 Data disaggregated by socio-economic 
characteristics
- Bringing in information not recorded in the 
 routine statistics
-  Rendall et al, Population Studies 2005 - 
 General Household Survey
- Rendall et al 2008 ONS LS 
- Jenkins et al 2008  NCSD and BCS70 
- Joshi, Hawkes and Ward 2004  mothers of 
 Millennium Cohort
- Also recommended 
- Ermisch and Pevalin ( 2005) 1970 cohort 
10Cohort differences in first birth probability, 
EW, low vs medium education (Rendall et al 2005) 
 11Trends by pre-birth occupation
- Rendall et al, 2008 comparing England and 
 France in the two census longitudinal studies
 with occupational data hypothesize and find
 increasing polarization in age at first birth by
 pre-childbearing occupation between the 1980s and
 1990s in the U.K. but not in France.
- Early first childbearing persisted in the U.K. 
 only among women in low-skill occupations, while
 shifts towards increasingly late first births
 occurred in clerical/secretarial occupations and
 above.
- Increases in age at first birth occurred across 
 all occupations in France, but this was still
 much earlier on average than for all but
 low-skill British mothers.
124. Determinants of Delay
- Is education the driver of delayed motherhood?or 
 just a proxy for something else?
- Those with human capital to accumulate, and 
 facing higher opportunity costs of earnings
 interruption have more motive than others to
 delay. What else might motivate the
 differentiated behaviour?
- Andrew Jenkins, Heather Joshi  Mark 
 Killingsworth
-  Educational Attainment, Labour Market 
 Conditions and the Timing of First and
 Higher-Order Births in Britain
-  CLS working paper imminent 
-  Uses data women from 1958 and 1970 Birth 
 Cohorts
-  Event history analysis of birth histories from 
 age 16 and evidence on childhood circumstances
13Hazard modelling with unobservered heterogeneity
hj, conditional hazard, for the j th birth ( 
1st up to 4th)
hj, conditional hazard, for the j th birth ( 
1st up to 4th) tj is the length of the jth 
spell Z is a vector of covariates ? is a 
person-specific unobserved heterogeneity 
component ?, ß and f are transition-specific 
parameters to be estimated 
Heckman, J. J.,  Singer, B. (1984). A Method for 
Minimizing the Impact of Distributional 
Assumptions in Econometric Models for Duration 
Data. Econometrica, 52, 271-320. 
 14Hazard Regression for First Births in Two Cohorts 
 15Why more early childbearing by the unskilled in 
England vs France?
- The outcome of policy regime? 
- Rendall et al ( 2008) analysis of births in 70s- 
 90s suggest
- The targeted ( means tested) benefit system and 
 lack of support for dual earner families tended
 to sustain, if not encourage early (often
 un-partnered) births in England and Wales
- The universal provisions in France, and support 
 for dual earner families reduced the need for
 others to delay into their thirties.
- Higher rates of staying on in education/ training 
 in France.
- This explanation may no longer apply after the 
 Regime Change since late 1990s
16Correlates of age at first birth among mothers of 
 Millennium Cohort Study (MCS)
- Mothers of MCS, themselves born between ca 1960 
 and 1986, mostly also around 1970, around half
 had first child in the survey, born 2000-1,
 others had their first child at various points
 over the 1980s and 1990s.
- 29 of mothers entered motherhood 21 and 21 at 
 31
- Early entry to motherhood associated with 
-  leaving school at minimum age 
-  low/ no qualifications 
-  family disruption in childhood 
-  Asian ethnicity, esp Bangladeshi 
 and Pakistani
-  unpartnered at time of 9 month 
 survey
-  not employed before or after birth 
-  living in disadvantaged area, on 
 benefits, low income, etc
-  partner low education and unemployment 
- Converse applies to those who started in their 30s
17Employment of Mothers with a child aged 3 
 185. Consequences for children? 
- The low income of the families of young mothers 
 clearly has some origins in the disadvantages
 which preceded parenthood.
- If relatively poor economic prospects meant there 
 was little point in delaying, it is these
 prospects which help account for the predicament
 of poor young families.
- MCS enables us to assess how these disadvantages 
 in the adult economy may have impinged on
 children
- At age 3 and 5 the children of the youngest 
 mothers had on average worse scores on cognitive
 and behavioural assessments
- This is partly accounted for by the lower 
 education of these mothers see analysis of age 3
 data below, but not entirely.
- There may be additional independent disadvantages 
 to being born to a young mother
19(No Transcript) 
 20Conclusions on Early motherhood
- Catching up on entry to motherhood is less 
 differentiated than avoiding an early start
 advantages of postponement tail off
- Both antecedent and current variables help 
 explain differential outcomes by age at
 motherhood disadvantage facing families of young
 mothers not just the result of birth timing, but
 is compounded by it
- Early motherhood plays a part in an 
 intergenerational transmission of disadvantage
- The bulge in the fertility schedule which helps 
 keep UK TFR high comes with some problems.
21Policy Implications
- Results suggest that Teenage Pregnancy Strategy 
 (halve pregnancy rate under 18) should be aimed
 at economic and employment opportunities as well
 as sex education
- Flexible employment and education and child-care 
 opportunities are needed for the younger mothers
 who have not been taking them.
- Young age at first motherhood say up to 25 
 should be regarded as a marker for other problems
 and vulnerabilities, but it is important to guard
 against stigmatization compounding the challenges
 of early motherhood.
- Winwin for mother, and child generation and the 
 public at large, if strategy succeeds in
 preventing the compounding of disadvantage in
 young families.
22Any questions?
- Data and Documentation for NCDS, BCS70 and MCS 
 now available from UK Data Archive
- www.data-archive.ac.uk 
- Documentation available from CLS website 
- http//www.cls.ioe.ac.uk/ 
- Guides to Initial findings (MCS1/MCS2/MCS3), 
 working papers, searchable bibliography of
 published research based on the studies is all
 available from CLS website
- http//www.cls.ioe.ac.uk/
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