The Effect of Child Allowances on Fertility

48 Pages Posted: 20 Dec 2012

See all articles by Esther Toledano

Esther Toledano

National Insurance Institute - Research and Planning Authority

Roni Frish

Bank of Israel - Research Department

Noam Zussman

Bank of Israel

Daniel Gottlieb

National Insurance Institute - Research and Planning Authority

Date Written: 2011

Abstract

This study examines the effect of child allowances in Israel on fertility in the years 1994–2007, with special reference to the cuts in allowances in 2003. Based on the administrative database of the National Insurance Institute and the significant changes in the allowances, it was found that the effect differed among population subgroups. The average high-order child allowances increased the probability of a married Arab woman giving birth by about 6–7 percent, and of a married ultra-orthodox Jewish woman doing so by about 3 percent. The allowance had no effect on other Jewish or Druze women, bringing the effect on the total population down to less than 2 percent. Older women, those with many children, with a low family income or who grew up in large families generally reacted more strongly to changes in the level of child allowances, ceteris paribus.

The study was carried out shortly after the cuts in child allowances and therefore we measured only the short term effect. Furthermore, the cuts took place near turning points in the business cycle and in parallel to reductions in other social benefits, which may not be fully reflected in the estimations.

Suggested Citation

Toledano, Esther and Frish, Roni and Zussman, Noam and Gottlieb, Daniel, The Effect of Child Allowances on Fertility (2011). Israel Economic Review, Vol. 9, No. 1, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2191643

Esther Toledano

National Insurance Institute - Research and Planning Authority ( email )

13 Weitzman Avenue
Jerusalem 91909
Israel

Roni Frish

Bank of Israel - Research Department ( email )

PO Box 780
Jerusalem 91007
Israel

Noam Zussman (Contact Author)

Bank of Israel ( email )

P.O. Box 780
Jerusalem, 91907
Israel

Daniel Gottlieb

National Insurance Institute - Research and Planning Authority ( email )

13 Weitzman Avenue
Jerusalem 91909
Israel

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