UNMARRIED PARENTHOOD AND REDISTRIBUTIVE POLITICS

Political survey data for nine West European countries show that women have become increasingly left-wing compared to men, and that this trend is positively correlated with the rise of nonmarriage in these countries. This pattern is mirrored in German longitudinal data (GSOEP), where transitions out...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the European Economic Association 2005-03, Vol.3 (1), p.95-119
Hauptverfasser: Edlund, Lena, Haider, Laila, Pande, Rohini
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Haider, Laila
Pande, Rohini
description Political survey data for nine West European countries show that women have become increasingly left-wing compared to men, and that this trend is positively correlated with the rise of nonmarriage in these countries. This pattern is mirrored in German longitudinal data (GSOEP), where transitions out of marriage make women, but not men, significantly more left-leaning. Analysis of public spending data for high-income OECD countries (1980-1998) suggests that the political impact of nonmarriage extends to the allocation of State resources with increases in nonmarriage first reducing, and then increasing, State redistribution towards children.
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source Business Source Complete; Jstor Complete Legacy; Oxford University Press Journals All Titles (1996-Current)
subjects Attitudes
Child care
Children
Cohabitation
Divorce
Gender
Gender politics
Germany
Longitudinal studies
Marriage
Men
OECD countries
Older adults
Parenthood
Public expenditure
Single status
Surveys
title UNMARRIED PARENTHOOD AND REDISTRIBUTIVE POLITICS
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