Concepts and Operationalisation of Reproductive Decisions<br> Implementation in Austria, Germany and Switzerland<br>

Recently the difference between actual and hypothetical fertility (fertility gap) has served as an indication to enforce family policies with the purpose to increase births. This paper examines the relevance of hypothetical fertility measured with fertility ideals and intentions, to the estimation o...

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Main Authors: Dimiter Philipov, Laura Bernardi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Federal Institute for Population Research 2012-06-01
Series:Comparative Population Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.comparativepopulationstudies.de/index.php/CPoS/article/view/78
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spelling doaj-fcfa4117c38e4f81bc238bf8ffdb21462021-08-02T04:05:01ZengFederal Institute for Population ResearchComparative Population Studies1869-89801869-89992012-06-01362-338Concepts and Operationalisation of Reproductive Decisions<br> Implementation in Austria, Germany and Switzerland<br>Dimiter PhilipovLaura BernardiRecently the difference between actual and hypothetical fertility (fertility gap) has served as an indication to enforce family policies with the purpose to increase births. This paper examines the relevance of hypothetical fertility measured with fertility ideals and intentions, to the estimation of the gap. Based on a literature review we discuss the meaning of these concepts and their operationalisation with empirical observations in three German-speaking countries (Austria, Germany, and Switzerland). Although the concept of societal ideal fertility is ambiguous it can be useful for understanding reproductive decisions when measured scrupulously. Operationalisation of short-term and long-term fertility intentions is discussed, along with their realisation. Analyses of intentions should rest on a theoretical background, such as the Miller-Pasta framework and the socio-psychological theory of planned behaviour. The latter is implemented in Austria and Germany using GGS data. The paper concludes that the fertility gap can be misleading both because the indicator of actual fertility as well as indicators of intended fertility can be imprecise. Useful policy-relevant information can be received by a specific form of the gap, when realisation of individual short-term intentions is considered.http://www.comparativepopulationstudies.de/index.php/CPoS/article/view/78Reproductive decision-makingIdeal number of childrenFertility intentionsTheory of planned behaviourFertility gap
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dimiter Philipov
Laura Bernardi
spellingShingle Dimiter Philipov
Laura Bernardi
Concepts and Operationalisation of Reproductive Decisions<br> Implementation in Austria, Germany and Switzerland<br>
Comparative Population Studies
Reproductive decision-making
Ideal number of children
Fertility intentions
Theory of planned behaviour
Fertility gap
author_facet Dimiter Philipov
Laura Bernardi
author_sort Dimiter Philipov
title Concepts and Operationalisation of Reproductive Decisions<br> Implementation in Austria, Germany and Switzerland<br>
title_short Concepts and Operationalisation of Reproductive Decisions<br> Implementation in Austria, Germany and Switzerland<br>
title_full Concepts and Operationalisation of Reproductive Decisions<br> Implementation in Austria, Germany and Switzerland<br>
title_fullStr Concepts and Operationalisation of Reproductive Decisions<br> Implementation in Austria, Germany and Switzerland<br>
title_full_unstemmed Concepts and Operationalisation of Reproductive Decisions<br> Implementation in Austria, Germany and Switzerland<br>
title_sort concepts and operationalisation of reproductive decisions<br> implementation in austria, germany and switzerland<br>
publisher Federal Institute for Population Research
series Comparative Population Studies
issn 1869-8980
1869-8999
publishDate 2012-06-01
description Recently the difference between actual and hypothetical fertility (fertility gap) has served as an indication to enforce family policies with the purpose to increase births. This paper examines the relevance of hypothetical fertility measured with fertility ideals and intentions, to the estimation of the gap. Based on a literature review we discuss the meaning of these concepts and their operationalisation with empirical observations in three German-speaking countries (Austria, Germany, and Switzerland). Although the concept of societal ideal fertility is ambiguous it can be useful for understanding reproductive decisions when measured scrupulously. Operationalisation of short-term and long-term fertility intentions is discussed, along with their realisation. Analyses of intentions should rest on a theoretical background, such as the Miller-Pasta framework and the socio-psychological theory of planned behaviour. The latter is implemented in Austria and Germany using GGS data. The paper concludes that the fertility gap can be misleading both because the indicator of actual fertility as well as indicators of intended fertility can be imprecise. Useful policy-relevant information can be received by a specific form of the gap, when realisation of individual short-term intentions is considered.
topic Reproductive decision-making
Ideal number of children
Fertility intentions
Theory of planned behaviour
Fertility gap
url http://www.comparativepopulationstudies.de/index.php/CPoS/article/view/78
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