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Title: Did Organized Labor Induce Labor? Unionization and the American Baby Boom

Citation Type: Miscellaneous

Publication Year: 2024

DOI: 10.2139/SSRN.4870124

Abstract: Labor unions have many well-documented effects on economic outcomes that are plausibly related to family formation. I study the impact of unionization on fertility using evidence from the largest expansion of unionism in American history: the enactment of the 1935 National Labor Relations Act (NLRA). I introduce new estimates of local union membership and exploit variation in exposure to the NLRA shock to estimate the place level effect of union growth on fertility outcomes. Unionization has positive effects on birth rates and completed fertility, and can account for approximately 20% of overall fertility increases during the Baby Boom. Effects are driven primarily by wage growth, protection against adverse labor market shocks, and impacts on female labor force participation.

Url: https://papers.ssrn.com/abstract=4870124

User Submitted?: No

Authors: Downes, Henry

Publisher:

Data Collections: IPUMS USA - Ancestry Full Count Data

Topics: Fertility and Mortality, Labor Force and Occupational Structure, Work, Family, and Time

Countries:

IPUMS NHGIS NAPP IHIS ATUS Terrapop