A platform for research: civil engineering, architecture and urbanism
The effect of maternal employment on teenage childbearing
Abstract. This paper estimates the effect of a mother’s employment on her teenage daughter’s likelihood of birth. Using data from the United States, the National Education Longitudinal Survey of 1988, the author finds that teenagers with working mothers who attend relatively wealthy schools are more likely (77%) to have a birth compared to teens who attend similar schools but have non-working mothers. In contrast, teenagers with working mothers who attend relatively poor schools are less likely (18%) to have a birth compared to teens who attend similar schools but have non-working mothers.
The effect of maternal employment on teenage childbearing
Abstract. This paper estimates the effect of a mother’s employment on her teenage daughter’s likelihood of birth. Using data from the United States, the National Education Longitudinal Survey of 1988, the author finds that teenagers with working mothers who attend relatively wealthy schools are more likely (77%) to have a birth compared to teens who attend similar schools but have non-working mothers. In contrast, teenagers with working mothers who attend relatively poor schools are less likely (18%) to have a birth compared to teens who attend similar schools but have non-working mothers.
The effect of maternal employment on teenage childbearing
Lopoo, Leonard M. (author)
2004
Article (Journal)
English
Teenage childbearing and cognitive development
Online Contents | 2002
|Does teenage childbearing reduce investment in human capital?
Online Contents | 2009
|Does teenage childbearing reduce investment in human capital?
Online Contents | 2009
|The effects of teenage fertility on young adult childbearing
Online Contents | 1996
|The effects of teenage childbearing on adult soft skills development
Online Contents | 2016
|