Published May 17, 2019 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Gender egalitarianism, perceived economic insecurity, and fertility intentions in Spain: A qualitative analysis

Description

Economic uncertainty contributes to low fertility in many European countries. On the other hand, greater gender equality may positively influence fertility. This paper examines how these two forces interact in Spain. We use in-depth interviews to analyse fertility decision-making among young and highly educated partnered adults living in urban areas. Highly gender-egalitarian interviewees are less likely to perceive economic insecurity as an obstacle to proceeding to a next birth than less egalitarian interviewees. But there is not necessarily a difference in these two groups’ overall fertility intentions, as highly egalitarian interviewees’ greater valuation of stable employment for both partners requires institutional and policy support for dual-earner couples’ childrearing. When we look only at interviewees who express economic insecurity, somewhat higher fertility intentions are expressed by those holding less gender-egalitarian attitudes. Our results underline the complexity of the interrelationships between economic insecurity, gender egalitarianism, and fertility intentions.

Files

Bueno_Brinton_2019_PS.pdf

Files (813.1 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:cfcc9c4daaca9080b2081f4199560da1
813.1 kB Preview Download

Additional details

Funding

FAMilyDECisions – Family formation decisions and gender attitudes in crisis times: an international, historical and longitudinal comparison. 657030
European Commission