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Redundancy Reduces Birth Rates of highly-skilled: Losing a Job Can Ruin Plans to Start a Family Highly skilled women who have lost their job tend not to realise their plans to start a family. This is the clear finding of a major study conducted by the University of Linz with support from the Austrian Science Fund FWF. According to the findings, career development issues can come to dominate the long-term life plans of women who have lost their job. The study also points toward additional socio-economic factors that can impact on birth rates over the long term. The fact that redundancy can impact on the financial income of those affected is plain to see. What is not quite so self-evident is the fact that it can also completely derail a person's life plans. However, this is exactly what Prof. Rudolf Winter-Ebmer from the Department of Economics at the University of Linz and his colleagues have uncovered. Redundancy forces primarily highly skilled female workers to decide against having children. Risk factors: Skills & salary increases Births, salaries, society The statistical evaluation of this comprehensive data enabled the team to establish the first ever link between redundancy and a decline in the birth rate over long periods of time. Prof. Winter-Ebmer explains: "Unexpected redundancy can not only lead to a long-term drop in income and extended periods of unemployment, it can also change life plans. In particular, birth rates among career-oriented women are expected to decline in the longer term. In this context, atypical forms of employment and fixed-term contracts are also problematic as they do not enable women to achieve a stable career within a company. " Besides delivering revealing findings on the effects of insolvencies, the FWF-backed study, which has already been the subject of much discussion at numerous international conferences, also forecasts how fertility may develop in the wake of the current economic crisis. Detailed information on the study "Clash of Career and Family: Fertility
Decisions after Job Displacement" can be found at: Scientific Contact Austrian Science Fund FWF Copy Editing & Distribution Vienna, 17th August 2009
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Austrian Science Fund (FWF) Haus der Forschung, Sensengasse 1, 1090 Vienna T +43-1-505 67 40 F +43-1-505 67 39 office@fwf.ac.at - www.fwf.ac.at |
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