ExplorerEnvironmental ScienceEconomics
Research PaperResearchia:202605.14044

How many parents does it take? Parental time allocation and the effectiveness of fertility subsidies

Jackie Dajin Young

Abstract

There has long been an apparent consensus in the literature on intra-household allocation and fertility that greater paternal involvement in childcare relaxes maternal time constraints, enabling mothers to increase their labor supply or leisure. Recent evidence, particularly from South Korea, challenges this view: increases in fathers' childcare time have coincided with a further increase in mothers' time dedicated to child-rearing. This paper develops an Overlapping Generations (OLG) growth mod...

Submitted: May 14, 2026Subjects: Economics; Environmental Science

Description / Details

There has long been an apparent consensus in the literature on intra-household allocation and fertility that greater paternal involvement in childcare relaxes maternal time constraints, enabling mothers to increase their labor supply or leisure. Recent evidence, particularly from South Korea, challenges this view: increases in fathers' childcare time have coincided with a further increase in mothers' time dedicated to child-rearing. This paper develops an Overlapping Generations (OLG) growth model to address such a puzzle. The central mechanism and our main innovation hinge on the functional form of the childcare technology. When maternal and paternal time are substitutes, the conventional result holds. However, when they are complements, greater paternal involvement necessarily raises maternal childcare time, depressing fertility and redirecting household resources toward child quality. We further argue that the elasticity of substitution should not be interpreted as a pure preference parameter, as it also reflects the social and institutional norms, the skills each parent brings to child-rearing and their intergenerational transmission. The model is extended to study the effectiveness of pro-natalist subsidies, suggesting that such policies may generate an unintended anti-fertility bias. Numerical simulations calibrated loosely to South Korean data confirm that the model is consistent with the observed quantity-quality trade-off and the persistence of low fertility despite active pro-natalist policy.


Source: arXiv:2605.13679v1 - http://arxiv.org/abs/2605.13679v1 PDF: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2605.13679v1 Original Link: http://arxiv.org/abs/2605.13679v1

Please sign in to join the discussion.

No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!

Access Paper
View Source PDF
Submission Info
Date:
May 14, 2026
Topic:
Environmental Science
Area:
Economics
Comments:
0
Bookmark
How many parents does it take? Parental time allocation and the effectiveness of fertility subsidies | Researchia