Abstract

In the US, growing up with parents with a low socio-economic status (SES) has been shown to increase the chance of having a birth outside marriage. However, less is known about the influence of parental SES in other Western countries. The current paper examines the association between parental educational attainment with the partnership context at first birth in 16 European and North American countries, by differentiating births within marriage, within cohabitation, or while being single. Moreover, we test whether the association between parental education and partnership context at childbirth changes over cohorts and whether its influence changes when controlling for own educational attainment. Data from the Generations and Gender Programme were used, as well as data from the American National Survey of Family Growth, the Canadian General Social Survey, and the Dutch Survey on Family Formation. The results show that in North American and East European countries, but not in West European countries, lower parental education increases the risk of having a birth within cohabitation. Moreover, in North American countries and half of the West and East European countries, lower parental education increases the risk of having a birth while being single. The association of parental education with the partnership context at birth tends to change furthermore over cohorts, although no clear pattern could be observed between countries. The study suggests that the intergenerational transmission of education is an important mechanism in explaining the influence of parental education, although other mechanisms also appear to be at work.

Highlights

  • Over the past decades, the percentage of children born outside marriage in Western societies has increased strongly

  • The current paper examines the association between parental educational attainment with the partnership context at first birth in 16 European and North American countries, by differentiating births within marriage, within cohabitation, or while being single

  • The results show that in North American and East European countries, but not in West European countries, lower parental education increases the risk of having a birth within cohabitation

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Summary

Introduction

The percentage of children born outside marriage (nonmarital births) in Western societies has increased strongly. The influence of parental SES on young adults’ partnership context at birth has been argued to be part of the reproduction of social inequality. It could be that in more egalitarian European countries, parental SES has less or no impact on partnership context at first birth. We study the influence of parental SES on the partnership context at first birth by examining how parental educational attainment influences whether first births occur within marriage, within cohabitation, or outside a coresidential partnership (i.e. single). What is the influence of parental educational attainment on the partnership context at first birth and how consistent is this influence across countries? To answer our research questions, retrospective event history data are used from 13 European countries from the Generations and Gender Survey, as well as data from the American National Survey of Family Growth, the Canadian General Social Survey, and the Dutch Survey on Family Formation

Background and Previous Research
Influence of Parental SES on Marital Versus Non-Marital Births
Influence of Parental SES on Cohabiting Versus Single Births
Differences Across Societal Settings and Cohorts
Gender
Data and Method
Data Quality
Variables
Analytical Approach
Descriptive Statistics
The Role of Parental Educational Attainment
Cohort Differences in the Role of Parental Educational Attainment
Change in the Role of Parental Education by Introducing Own Education
Gender Differences
Discussion
Full Text
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