Production, Reproduction, and Education: Women, Children, and Work in a British Perspective
- 1 September 2002
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Population and Development Review
- Vol. 28 (3) , 445-474
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1728-4457.2002.00445.x
Abstract
This article reviews findings of studies by the author and colleagues on relationships between women's work and the reproduction of the British population based on data for female birth cohorts 1922–70. The studies address three questions: (1) How do children affect women's paid work and lifetime earnings? (2) How does women's employment affect the quantity of children born? (3) How does women's employment affect the “quality” of children? The answers are affected by the woman's educational attainment. On question 1, childrearing may often halve lifetime earnings, but seldom for the well educated. By contrast, any effects from employment to childbearing are most apparent in the late motherhood of the well educated. Child quality, as assessed by indicators of child development, benefits from maternal education and suffers little from maternal employment. The economic advantages for children in dual‐career families are thus unabated. A widening gulf between mothers will tend to polarize the life chances of their children, unless there are more options to combine employment and childrearing, especially including good‐quality child care for those who cannot afford the market price. Education is a powerful influence, but does not alone solve all issues of equity, whether between families or between sexes.Keywords
This publication has 43 references indexed in Scilit:
- Internalising and externalising children's behaviour problems in Britain and the US: relationships to family resources1Children & Society, 2000
- Gender and Income Inequality in the UK 1968–90: The Feminization of Earnings or of Poverty?Journal of the Royal Statistical Society Series A: Statistics in Society, 1998
- Fertility in England and Wales: A Fifty-Year PerspectivePopulation Studies, 1996
- Combining Employment with Childcare: An Escape From Dependence?Journal of Social Policy, 1996
- The Contraceptive Pill and Women's Employment as Factors in Fertility Change in Britain 1963–1980: A Challenge to the Conventional ViewPopulation Studies, 1993
- The Compatibility of Employment and Childbearing in Contemporary SwedenActa Sociologica, 1993
- The Cash Opportunity Costs of Childbearing: An Approach To Estimation Using British DataPopulation Studies, 1990
- Childbearing and Wives' Foregone EarningsPopulation Studies, 1988
- The Next Birth and the Labour Market: A Dynamic Model of Births in England and WalesPopulation Studies, 1987
- The interpretation and role of work-associated accelerated childbearing in post-war BritainEuropean Journal of Population, 1986