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Study links women's employment to fertility rates in developing nations

A new research paper explores the relationship between women's employment participation and fertility rates in developing countries. Using panel data from 115 nations between 1991 and 2018, the study applies econometric methods to analyze causality across different continents. Findings indicate that career choices significantly influence fertility behavior in North and South America, while other factors are more dominant in other regions. AI

RANK_REASON This is a research paper published on arXiv detailing a statistical analysis of socio-economic factors. [lever_c_demoted from research: ic=2 ai=0.4]

Read on arXiv cs.LG →

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COVERAGE [2]

  1. arXiv cs.LG TIER_1 English(EN) · Thi Kim Ngan Nguyen ·

    The discovery of the effects of women employment participation on the fertility of developing countries: A panel data approach

    arXiv:2606.07093v1 Announce Type: new Abstract: The fertility trend in developing countries has experienced a significant decline in the last few decades; at the same time, the role of women in the workplace has improved. To have a better insight of the causality of the rate of w…

  2. arXiv cs.LG TIER_1 English(EN) · Thi Kim Ngan Nguyen ·

    The discovery of the effects of women employment participation on the fertility of developing countries: A panel data approach

    The fertility trend in developing countries has experienced a significant decline in the last few decades; at the same time, the role of women in the workplace has improved. To have a better insight of the causality of the rate of women participation in the labor market on the to…