Hungarian Demographic Research Institute.
Stockholm University.
Popul Stud (Camb). 2020 Mar;74(1):39-54. doi: 10.1080/00324728.2019.1694165. Epub 2019 Dec 12.
Following steep falls in birth rates in Central and Eastern European countries during the economic and institutional restructuring of the early 1990s, governments made substantial efforts to stop or at least reduce the fertility decline. In Hungary, parents with three or more children could benefit from specific new policy measures: the flat-rate child-rearing support paid from the youngest child's third to eighth birthdays (signalling recognition of stay-at-home motherhood) and a redesigned and upgraded tax relief system. However, the success of these policy measures, if any, is difficult to detect in aggregate statistics. Analysing data from the Hungarian Generations and Gender Survey, we rely on event history methods to examine the policies' effects on third birth risks, especially among different socio-economic groups. The results indicate that while the child-rearing support increased third birth risks among the least educated, the generous tax relief had a similar effect for parents with tertiary education.
在 20 世纪 90 年代初的经济和制度结构调整期间,中东欧国家的出生率急剧下降,此后,各国政府为阻止生育率进一步下降或至少减少生育率下降做出了巨大努力。在匈牙利,生育三个或更多孩子的父母可以受益于特定的新政策措施:从最小的孩子三岁到八岁生日支付的定额育儿支持(表明认可全职母亲)和重新设计和升级的税收减免制度。然而,这些政策措施的成功与否,很难从总体统计数据中察觉。我们利用匈牙利世代和性别调查的数据,依靠事件历史方法来检验这些政策对第三次生育风险的影响,尤其是在不同社会经济群体中的影响。结果表明,虽然育儿支持增加了受教育程度最低的人的第三次生育风险,但对接受高等教育的父母来说,慷慨的税收减免也有类似的影响。