Publication | Closed Access
Labor Market Segmentation and Relative Black/White Teenage Birth Rates
10
Citations
15
References
1990
Year
Teenage PregnancyReproductive HealthLabor Market ParticipationSocial SciencesGender StudiesEconomic AnalysisPovertyTeenage MotherhoodPublic HealthTeenage MothersEconomic InequalitySocial InequalityEconomicsDemographic ChangeLabor Market SegmentationLabor Market TheoryDisadvantaged BackgroundLabor EconomicsPopulation InequalitySociologyDemography
"Teenage mothers typically have lower educational attainment than other women. Most observers have argued that this is a major reason for their greater risk of poverty. This article takes the opposite view: that circumstances associated with poverty contribute to a greater likelihood of teenage childbearing. In particular, poor educational quality and the chances of secondary sector employment are more common for black women, regardless of their age at first birth. Hence the payoffs to education may be quite low for these women, which may be the reason for early motherhood. This argument is presented in terms of segmented labor market theory. Data to support it is presented from the [U.S.] National Longitudinal Survey of Youth. Other common explanations of teenage motherhood are critiqued."
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