Abstract
This study is the first to find that mate availability explains much of the race gap in non marital fertility in the United
States. Both a general and an education-based metric have strong effects. The novel statistical power arises from difference-in-differences
for blacks and whites, multiple cohorts, periods, and coefficient restrictions consistent with both the data and models in
which differences in mate availability can induce blacks and whites to respond in opposite directions to changes in mate availability. Results are robust to several alternative specifications and tests and appear relevant where marriages
are segmented along racial, religious, or other lines.
States. Both a general and an education-based metric have strong effects. The novel statistical power arises from difference-in-differences
for blacks and whites, multiple cohorts, periods, and coefficient restrictions consistent with both the data and models in
which differences in mate availability can induce blacks and whites to respond in opposite directions to changes in mate availability. Results are robust to several alternative specifications and tests and appear relevant where marriages
are segmented along racial, religious, or other lines.
- Content Type Journal Article
- Pages 1-9
- DOI 10.1007/s12122-012-9135-z
- Authors
- Joe A. Stone, Department of Economics, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR 97405, USA
- Journal Journal of Labor Research
- Online ISSN 1936-4768
- Print ISSN 0195-3613