Did Australia's Baby Bonus Increase the fertillity Rate?
Survey
HILDA
Author(s)
Date Issued
2009-02
Pages
30
Abstract
In May 2004, the Australian government announced a “Baby Bonus” policy, paying women
an initial A$3,000 per new child. We use household panel data from the Household, Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia Survey (N = 14,932) and a simultaneous equations approach to analyze the effects of this bonus on fertility intentions and ultimately births. The results indicate that opportunity costs influence intentions and births in predictable ways. Fertility intentions rose after the announcement of the Baby Bonus, and the birth rate is estimated to have risen modestly as a result. The marginal cost to the government for an additional birth is estimated to be at least A$124,000.
an initial A$3,000 per new child. We use household panel data from the Household, Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia Survey (N = 14,932) and a simultaneous equations approach to analyze the effects of this bonus on fertility intentions and ultimately births. The results indicate that opportunity costs influence intentions and births in predictable ways. Fertility intentions rose after the announcement of the Baby Bonus, and the birth rate is estimated to have risen modestly as a result. The marginal cost to the government for an additional birth is estimated to be at least A$124,000.
External resource (Link)
ISBN
ISSN 1328-4991 (Print) ISSN 1447-5863 (Online) ISBN 978-0-7340-3295-9
Type
Reports and technical papers
