Fertility, Female Labor Supply, and Family Policy

28 Pages Posted: 25 May 2011

See all articles by Hans Fehr

Hans Fehr

University of Würzburg - Institute of Economics and Social Sciences

Daniela Ujhelyiova

University of Würzburg

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Date Written: May 19, 2011

Abstract

The present paper develops a general equilibrium model with overlapping generations and endogenous fertility in order to analyze the interaction between public policy and household labor supply and fertility decisions. The model's benchmark equilibrium reflects the current family policy consisting of joint taxation of married couples, monetary transfers and in-kind benefits which reduce the time cost of children. Then we simulate alternative reforms of the tax and the child benefit system and analyze the long-run impact on fertility and female labor supply. Our simulations indicate three central results: First, policies which simply increase the family budget either via higher transfers (direct or in-kind) or via family splitting increase fertility but reduce female employment. Second, increasing tax revenues due to the introduction of individual taxation would increase female employment but reduce fertility. Third, revenue neutral policies such as a reform of the benefit structure or a move towards individual taxation combined with an increase in in-kind benefits may achieve both goals and therefore yield significant welfare gains.

Keywords: stochastic fertility, general equilibrium life cycle model

JEL Classification: J120, J220

Suggested Citation

Fehr, Hans and Ujhelyiova, Daniela, Fertility, Female Labor Supply, and Family Policy (May 19, 2011). CESifo Working Paper Series No. 3455, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1846443 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.1846443

Hans Fehr (Contact Author)

University of Würzburg - Institute of Economics and Social Sciences ( email )

Sanderring 2
D-97070 Wuerzburg
Germany
0931- 31 29 72 (Phone)
0931- 888 71 29 (Fax)

Daniela Ujhelyiova

University of Würzburg ( email )

Sanderring 2
Würzburg, D-97070
Germany

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