Fertility Decisions and Employment Protection: The Unintended Consequences of the Italian Jobs Act

27 Pages Posted: 2 Mar 2020 Last revised: 19 May 2022

See all articles by Maria De Paola

Maria De Paola

Università degli Studi della Calabria - Department of Economics and Statistics

roberto nisticò

CSEF - University of Naples Federico II

Vincenzo Scoppa

Università degli Studi della Calabria - Department of Economics and Statistics

Abstract

We study the effect of a reduction in employment protection on fertility decisions. Using data from the Italian Labor Force Survey for the years 2013-2018, we analyze how the propensity to have a child has been affected by the 2015 Labor Market Reform, the so-called "Jobs Act", which has essentially reduced the employment protection for large-firm employees and leaved largely unchanged that for small-firm ones. We employ a Difference-in-Differences identification strategy and compare the average change over time in fertility decisions of women employed in large firms with the average change experienced by women employed in small firms.We find that women exposed to the reduction in employment protection have a 1.4 percentage point lower probability of having a child than unexposed women. A battery of robustness checks confirms this finding. We document large heterogeneous effects by marital status, parity, geographic areas as well as by the level of education and wage. Our findings help understand the potential unintended consequences that reforms introducing more labor market flexibility have on fertility decisions by increasing insecurity on career prospects.

Keywords: labor market reform, employment protection legislation, fertility, difference-in-differences

JEL Classification: J13, J65, J41, M51, C31

Suggested Citation

De Paola, Maria and nisticò, roberto and Scoppa, Vincenzo, Fertility Decisions and Employment Protection: The Unintended Consequences of the Italian Jobs Act. IZA Discussion Paper No. 12991, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3546389

Maria De Paola (Contact Author)

Università degli Studi della Calabria - Department of Economics and Statistics ( email )

via Ponte Bucci
Arcavacata di Rende, Cosenza 87036
Italy

Roberto Nisticò

CSEF - University of Naples Federico II

Vincenzo Scoppa

Università degli Studi della Calabria - Department of Economics and Statistics ( email )

via Ponte Bucci
Arcavacata di Rende, Cosenza 87036
Italy

Do you have negative results from your research you’d like to share?

Paper statistics

Downloads
67
Abstract Views
366
Rank
608,061
PlumX Metrics