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Publications in Scientific Journals:

T.H. Lyngstad, A. Fürnkranz-Prskawetz:
"Do Siblingsī Fertility Decisions Influence Each Other?";
Demography, 47 (2010), 4; 923 - 934.



English abstract:
Individualsī fertility decisions are shaped not only by their own characteristics and life course paths, but also by social interaction with others. However, in practice, it is difficult to disentangle the role of social interaction from other factors, such as individual and family background variables. We measure social interaction through the cross-sibling influences on fertility.
Continuous-time hazard models are estimated separately for womenīs first and second births. In addition to individual socioeconomic variables, demographic variables, and an unobserved
factor specific to each sibling pair, siblingsī birth events and their timing enter as time-varying
covariates. We use data from longitudinal population-wide Norwegian administrative registers. The data cover more than 110,000 sibling pairs, and include the siblingsī fertility, education, income,
and marital histories. Our results indicate that cross-sibling influences are relatively strong for the
respondentīs first births, but weak for the second parity transition.

Created from the Publication Database of the Vienna University of Technology.