Volume 28, Number 2 (Spring) 1993
Rosenzweig, Mark R. and Kenneth I. Wolpin. 1993. "Maternal Expectations and Ex Post Rationalizations: The Usefulness of Survey Information on the Wantedness of Children." Journal of Human Resources 28(2):205-229.
In this paper we assess the value of retrospectively-ascertained information on the wantedness of children by evaluating (i) the extent to which such information provides an unbiased estimate of the excess births occurring solely as a consequence of imperfect fertility control and (ii) whether information on the wantedness of a child is a good predictor of its subsequent treatment by parents - whether unwantedness signals neglect. We formulate a dynamic model of fertility incorporating stochastic fertility control, uncertain child traits and information accumulation from which we can formulate a rigorous definition of child-specific unwantedness. Based on information on both retrospectively obtained and pre-birth information on wantedness and on children's birthweight, we find that parents are more likely to report that children are wanted ex post if they have a better birth outcome and exhibit overly optimistic expectations about their children's traits and/or risk preferences. As a consequence, published statistics on the prevalence of unwanted births overstate the true proportion due to contraceptive failure by 26 percent.
Mark R. Rosenzweig is a professor of economics at the University of Pennsylvania and Kenneth I. Wolpin is a professor of economics at New York University. Partial support for this research was provided by NIH grant HD23343. The authors benefited from the comments of several anonymous referees. The data used in this article can be obtained beginning in December 1993 through December 1996 from Mark R. Rosenzweig at: Department of Economics, University of Pennsylvania, 3718 Locust Walk, Philadelphia, PA 19104.
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