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Fertility, education, and female labour participation: Dynamic panel analysis of ASEAN-7 countries

Waliu Olawale Shittu (School of Economics, Finance and Banking, Universiti Utara Malaysia, Changlun, Malaysia)
Norehan Abdullah (School of Economics, Finance and Banking, Universiti Utara Malaysia, Changlun, Malaysia)

International Journal of Social Economics

ISSN: 0306-8293

Article publication date: 14 August 2018

Issue publication date: 7 January 2019

1554

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to examine the relationship among fertility, female education and female labour participation in ASEAN-7 countries: Malaysia, Indonesia, Brunei, Myanmar, the Philippines, Vietnam and Thailand, between 1990 and 2015. The choice of these countries is informed by their economic, social and political importance in the ASEAN Bloc; while Indonesia boasts of the largest population in ASEAN, Brunei and Malaysia boast of relatively advanced economies, in GDP terms.

Design/methodology/approach

Pesaran’s test of panel unit root in the presence of cross-sectional dependence was employed to test for the stationarity properties of the series. The dynamic long-run coefficients of the variables were examined using the pooled mean group, common correlated effect and dynamic OLS techniques, while the Granger causality test was used to estimate the direction of causality among the variables.

Findings

The findings indicate that there is both negative and positive relationship between fertility and labour force participation, with causality running from labour force participation through fertility – on the one hand, and between education and labour force participation, with no causality between the two – on the other hand.

Research limitations/implications

The study, therefore, upholds the role incompatibility and societal response hypothesis, as well as human capital and opportunity cost theories.

Practical implications

The appropriate policies are those that gear the countries’ fertility decisions towards the societal response hypothesis in order to enhance human capital development and increase productivity. This implies that the governments of ASEAN-7 countries should ease hindrances on a balanced combination of family-care and workforce participation on married women in view of the gender-wage gap created by female work apathy, which largely reduces domestic productivities. Appropriate policies in this direction include rising availability and affordability of childcare facilities, incentives for women higher education, attitudinal changes towards job-participating mothers, as well as legislated paid parental leaves which have balanced the, hitherto, incompatibility between work and childbearing.

Originality/value

Except for Abdullah et al. (2013), the authors have no knowledge of other authors who have worked on this relationship in the chosen ASEAN countries. This study is, however, an improvement upon that of Abdullah et al. (2013) in different ways, one of which is that it considers seven ASEAN countries, thus making the results more valid representation of the ASEAN Bloc. Furthermore, the Pesaran (2007) technique of unit root testing has not been found in any recent literature on the subject-matter. This technique, being a second-generation test, tests variable unit root in the presence of cross-sectional dependence.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors of this paper have not made their research data set openly available. Any enquiries regarding the data set can be directed to the corresponding author.

Citation

Shittu, W.O. and Abdullah, N. (2019), "Fertility, education, and female labour participation: Dynamic panel analysis of ASEAN-7 countries", International Journal of Social Economics, Vol. 46 No. 1, pp. 66-82. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJSE-11-2017-0559

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2019, Emerald Publishing Limited

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