The decision to have a child is influenced by many contextual factors. We consider country of residence, sex, partnership status, age, and the number of children a person already has (parity) and use the theory of planned behavior to show that these factors influence child-bearing decisions indirectly by their effects on one or more of the theory’s major predictors. Thus, for each contextual varia-ble, we identify personal attitudes toward having a child, social influences (subjec-tive norms), and life situation factors associated with perceived behavioral control and describe their role in the child-bearing decision. Our analyses are based on da-ta obtained from 38,813 respondents to the Generations and Gender Survey in eight countries: Italy, France, Germany, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, Georgia and Russia. We conclude that each of the contextual variables considered plays a part in setting the background for the decision to have a child, and we explain their effects by considering the beliefs associated with attitudes to having a child, with subjective norms and with perceived behavioral control. The relative importance of different beliefs, and the relative effects of attitudes, subjective norms and perceived behavioral control vary with both national and personal context as a person goes through the life course.

Making the decision to have a child

Klobas, Jane E.
;
2015

Abstract

The decision to have a child is influenced by many contextual factors. We consider country of residence, sex, partnership status, age, and the number of children a person already has (parity) and use the theory of planned behavior to show that these factors influence child-bearing decisions indirectly by their effects on one or more of the theory’s major predictors. Thus, for each contextual varia-ble, we identify personal attitudes toward having a child, social influences (subjec-tive norms), and life situation factors associated with perceived behavioral control and describe their role in the child-bearing decision. Our analyses are based on da-ta obtained from 38,813 respondents to the Generations and Gender Survey in eight countries: Italy, France, Germany, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, Georgia and Russia. We conclude that each of the contextual variables considered plays a part in setting the background for the decision to have a child, and we explain their effects by considering the beliefs associated with attitudes to having a child, with subjective norms and with perceived behavioral control. The relative importance of different beliefs, and the relative effects of attitudes, subjective norms and perceived behavioral control vary with both national and personal context as a person goes through the life course.
2015
9789401794008
9789401794015
Philipov, Dimiter; Liefbroer, Aart C.; Klobas, Jane E.
Reproductive decision-making in a macro-micro perspective
Klobas, Jane E.; Ajzen, Icek
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11565/3789508
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