Teen and non-marital childbearing.
Kearney, Melissa S.
There is a widespread consensus among the American public that
rates of teen pregnancy and unintended pregnancies to young, unmarried
women are too high. Approximately 30 percent of teenage girls in the
United States become pregnant, and 20 percent give birth by age 20. In
addition, half of all pregnancies in the United States are reported by
the mother as unintended. More than one-third of these (1.1 million
pregnancies in 2001) are to unmarried women in their twenties. Rates of
teen pregnancy and unplanned pregnancy are higher among young unmarried
women, lower income women, women with lower levels of education, and
minority women.
The concern about rates of teen pregnancy and non-marital pregnancy
is driven in large measure by the observed inferior outcomes for
children born into disadvantaged situations--in particular, those born
to young, unmarried mothers. In this research summary, I describe some
of my work on the policy determinants of teen and non-marital
childbearing and the socioeconomic differences in rates of teen
childbearing and parental time investment in children.
Policy determinants of Teen and Non-marital Pregnancy
There are several commonly suggested policy approaches to reducing
the level of teen and unintended pregnancies. One is increased access to
contraception. As an initial matter, the term "unintended" as
captured in surveys is fraught with measurement and interpretation
issues, and it is not always clear what is meant when a woman reports
her pregnancy to be unintended. Furthermore, there is ethnographic and
anecdotal evidence that a substantial number of teen pregnancies may be
deliberate. Policies on contraception will be effective only to the
extent that teenagers or other young women are committed to avoiding
pregnancy and to the extent that they serve women who were not already
using contraception.
Research that I conducted with Phil Levine suggests that expanded
access to publicly provided family planning services results in a
moderate reduction in overall births and in births to teens. (1) Between
December 1993 and March 2007, 25 states received waivers from the
federal government to extend the coverage of family planning services to
women who do not otherwise qualify for Medicaid health insurance
coverage. We conduct difference-in-difference analyses to identify the
causal impact of these waiver policies using a wide array of data
sources, including Vital Statistics birth data, abortion data from the
Guttmacher Institute, and microdata on sexual activity and contraceptive use from the 1988, 1995, and 2002 National Surveys of Family Growth
(NSFG). Using data from the Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Services
(CMS), we also confirm that these waivers increased the number of women
receiving Medicaid-funded family planning services.
We find that extending Medicaid family planning services to women
at higher levels of income dramatically increased the number of women
receiving those services. By itself, this does not necessarily indicate
an effect on behavior, as it could merely reflect a crowding out of
privately provided services. However, we demonstrate that the waiver
policies reduced overall births to non-teens by about 2 percent and to
teens by over 4 percent. Scaling these estimates by the estimated
proportion of women in a state made newly eligible by expanded coverage,
we find that births to newly-eligible non-teens fell by almost 9
percent. Moreover, our analysis of individual-level data from the NSFG
implies that the reduction in fertility associated with income-based
waivers is attributable to greater contraceptive use; we find no
evidence of an effect on sexual activity. Based on the cost per
recipient of family planning services, we find that each birth avoided
would cost on the order of $6,800.
Another policy approach to addressing teen and non-marital
childbearing is to alter the financial costs and incentives for
childbearing. This approach was taken during the reform of welfare,
first as part of state waiver demonstrations and then with the 1996
national welfare reform legislation. In previous work I found that
family cap policies implemented as part of welfare reform in the early-
and mid-1990s were not effective at reducing birth rates among targeted
women. (2) The family cap was the primary welfare reform policy targeted
at reducing non-marital childbearing--it ended the practice of providing
families on welfare with additional cash benefits when a new child was
born into the family. The motivation behind the policy was to eliminate
the financial incentive for conceiving an additional child while on
welfare and thereby to reduce births among the target population.
I use the variation across states in the timing of family cap
implementation to identify whether this policy leads to a reduction in
births. The primary economic question is whether the availability of
fewer resources at the margin decreases a woman's propensity to
bear additional children. The potential direct effect of the policy is
to reduce higher-order births: a decrease in marginal resources raises
the price of an additional child and may thereby deter a woman from
having additional births. Insofar as the policy sends a message that
welfare is less generous than previously, it may also lead a woman to
delay childbearing until she is financially secure and thereby reduce
first births as well.
The vital statistics birth data for the years 1989 to 1998 offer no
evidence that family cap policies lead to a reduction in births among
women ages 15 to 34. After I control for state effects, month effects,
and state-specific linear time trends, I find that a decline in births
of more than 1 percent can be rejected at the 95 percent confidence
level. (The upper bound of the confidence interval is an increase in
births of 1.1 percent.) This finding--of no effect on births--is
maintained across multiple specification checks. The set of confidence
intervals around six alternative estimates has a lower bound of a 1
percent decline and an upper bound of a 2 percent increase. I also find
that the data reject large declines in higher-order births among
demographic groups with relatively high welfare participation rates.
A third approach to addressing high rates of teen pregnancy
involves targeted interventions, or programs run at the school or
community level. In a recently completed draft for an NBER conference
volume, I review the evidence on the effectiveness of teenage pregnancy prevention programs. (3) Teen pregnancy prevention programs can be
usefully categorized into three types: 1) sex education programs with an
abstinence focus; 2) sex education with a contraception focus; and 3)
multi-component youth development programs that include sex education as
one of many features. Some programs are based in schools and are
compulsory, others are school-based but voluntary, and others are run
through community centers and groups. There is substantial variation
across programs in terms of the types of populations served, including
racial and ethnic differences as well as ages of the teenagers involved.
My review of the most compelling evidence concludes that abstinence
education programs tend to be ineffective at reducing rates of sexual
activity. However, compared to non-abstinence-focused sexual education
courses, these programs do not lead to lower rates of contraceptive use
among sexually active teens, as some critics have claimed. Certain
contraceptive-focused sex education programs may be effective at
reducing risky sexual behavior among participants. And finally, a couple
of high-profile multi-component interventions show promise of being
effective, but would be very difficult and expensive to replicate in
other settings.
In sum, the past two decades have seen numerous and varied
efforts--by community groups, schools, non-profits, and all levels of
government--to bring down rates of teen pregnancy and childbearing in
this country. Research in this area, at this stage, is far from being
able to offer a conclusive answer to the question of what drove the rise
and subsequent decline in teen pregnancy. Nor can we conclusively answer
why the level of teen childbearing and unintended (as reported by the
mother) childbearing are so much higher in the United States than in
other developed countries. A long-term goal of my research is to address
this issue of international comparisons.
Socioeconomic Differences
The economics literature on teen and non-marital childbearing has
tended to focus on policy and environmental determinants in a rational
choice framework. But parallel literatures in other social as well as
clinical sciences emphasize the role of socioeconomic disadvantage and
related factors during childhood. Socioeconomic disadvantage can lead to
early childbearing through a number of different mechanisms. The poor
may lack the resources available to know about the different
opportunities available to them or to take advantage of those
opportunities. This could hinder their ability to make optimal choices
regarding, for example, contraceptive use, educational attainment, and
labor market training. Alternatively, schools and labor market
conditions in their communities may be sufficiently weak that staying in
school and avoiding early childbearing might not be seen as offering any
real benefit. In addition, some ethnographic evidence suggests that
those who grow up in disadvantaged situations are simply more inclined
to have children because of what might be appropriately described as
differences in preferences.
Levine and I confirm an empirical relationship between individual
rates of socioeconomic disadvantage and rates of early childbearing but
find that socioeconomic disadvantage plays only a small role in the
aggregate. (4) Using the Panel Study of Income Dynamics (PSID) we
observe that growing up in socioeconomic disadvantage is associated with
substantially higher rates of teen childbearing. The main empirical
contribution of this paper is a cohort-based analysis: we want to know
whether cohorts of women with higher rates of socioeconomic disadvantage
at birth subsequently have higher rates of early childbearing. We use
Vital Statistics microdata from 1968 through 2003 to conduct an analysis
of the relationship between rates of socioeconomic disadvantage of a
birth cohort and the cohort's early childbearing experiences. As a
proxy for disadvantage at birth, we use four alternate factors, all
based on the mother's characteristics: having been born to a mother
with a low level of education; to an unmarried mother; to a mother under
age 18; or to a mother under age 20.
Our cohort-based analysis implies an even tighter correlation
between rates of background disadvantage and early childbearing than is
observed in the PSID data at the individual level. But, when our
analysis econometrically controls for fixed state and year of birth
effects, the relationship between rates of disadvantage and early
childbearing is found to be quite modest. For example, a 10 percent
increase in the proportion of women who were themselves born to a teen
mother (a measure of disadvantage) is associated with a less than 1
percent increase in the proportion who give birth before age 18 (a
measure of early childbearing). This suggests that broader, societal
forces are far more important in determining rates of early childbearing
than rates of socioeconomic disadvantage. Our results lead us to
conclude that the impact of a fairly large shock to socioeconomic
disadvantage would have only a modest impact on rates of early
childbearing.
Another area of socioeconomic differences in childrearing behaviors
involves parental time-use patterns. (5) Jonathan Guryan, Erik Hurst,
and I use data from the recent American Time Use Surveys as well as from
Multinational Time Use Surveys to examine parental time allocated to the
care of their children. We draw three major empirical conclusions about
parental child care time. First, higher earnings or earnings potential
are associated with more time spent with children, even though higher
earning parents also work more hours in the labor market. Second, this
relationship appears to hold within the United States, across other
countries, and within other countries examined. And third, this positive
gradient of parental time use and education or income in time spent in
child care is the opposite of the gradient observed for typical leisure
and home production activities.
Using a Beckerian framework of time allocation, we conclude that
child care is best modeled as being distinct from either typical home
production or leisure activities. In addition, our results suggest that
time spent with one's children is more highly valued by individuals
with a higher opportunity-cost of their time, as measured by earnings
potential. What might account for this? It could arise if caring for
children is a "luxury good; if more educated parents have a lower
elasticity of substitution between own and market-based child care (or
just a higher relative preference for time spent with their children),
or if the returns to investing in the children of more educated parents
are relatively higher. The fact that the children of higher-educated
parents receive more time with the active attention of their parents, or
conversely, that the children of lower-education parents receive less,
may have important implications for the intergenerational transmission
of human capital.
(1) M.S. Kearney and P. Levine, "Subsidized Contraception,
Fertility, and Sexual Behavior," earlier version released as NBER
Working Paper No. 13045, April 2007, forthcoming in Review of Economics
and Statistics.
(2) M.S. Kearney, "Is There an Effect of Incremental Welfare
Benefits on Fertility Behavior? A Look at the Family Cap," NBER
Working Paper No. 9093, August 2002, and Journal of Human Resources,
2004, 39(2): pp. 295-325.
(3) M.S. Kearney, "Teen Pregnancy Prevention as an
Anti-Poverty Intervention: A Review of the Evidence," forthcoming
in Targeting Investments in Youth: Fighting Poverty when Resources are
Limited, Phillip Levine and David Zimmerman eds., University of Chicago
Press.
(4) M. S. Kearney and P. Levine, "Socioeconomic Disadvantage
and Early Childbearing," NBER Working Paper No. 13436, September
2007, forthcoming in An Economics Perspective on the Problems of
Disadvantaged Youth, Jonathan Gruber ed., University of Chicago Press.
(5) J. Guryan, E. Hurst, and M.S. Kearney, "Parental Education
and Parental Time with Children," NBER Working Paper No. 13993, May
2008, and Journal of Economic Perspectives 22(3), Summer 2008, pp.
23-46.
Melissa S. Kearney *
* Kearney is a Faculty Research Fellow in NBER's Program on
Children and an assistant professor at the University of Maryland. Her
profile appears later in this issue.