Publication Information
This paper intends to contribute to the economic literature that investigates the origins of teenage pregnancy and early marriage/co habitation in Peru and to improve understanding of the risk factors of one important gender-related issue that has historically provoked asymmetric costs for boys and girls. First, we investigate how early cohabitation, marriage and childbearing vary according to early socioeconomic conditions; second, we explore to what extent the factors related to early poverty matter equally for boys and girls; third, we examine whether factors such as low aspirations and low expectations of future economic success, school achievement, socio- emotional competencies, knowledge of family planning, and sexual behaviours, can contribute to explaining teenage childbearing and marriage in disadvantaged contexts; and finally, we look at how changes in socioeconomic status, migration, and household structure, as well changes in aspirations, test scores, and socio-emotional competencies during childhood and early adolescence, might have increased or decreased the probability of teenage childbearing, marriage, and cohabitation.
The paper can be downloaded from IZA's website
This paper intends to contribute to the economic literature that investigates the origins of teenage pregnancy and early marriage/co habitation in Peru and to improve understanding of the risk factors of one important gender-related issue that has historically provoked asymmetric costs for boys and girls. First, we investigate how early cohabitation, marriage and childbearing vary according to early socioeconomic conditions; second, we explore to what extent the factors related to early poverty matter equally for boys and girls; third, we examine whether factors such as low aspirations and low expectations of future economic success, school achievement, socio- emotional competencies, knowledge of family planning, and sexual behaviours, can contribute to explaining teenage childbearing and marriage in disadvantaged contexts; and finally, we look at how changes in socioeconomic status, migration, and household structure, as well changes in aspirations, test scores, and socio-emotional competencies during childhood and early adolescence, might have increased or decreased the probability of teenage childbearing, marriage, and cohabitation.
The paper can be downloaded from IZA's website