Partage des biens en cas de divorce et naissances hors couple : le cas de 12 pays occidendaux
This paper investigates the likelihood of an unpartnered birth
as a function of laws regulating the division of joint property in
case of divorce. Based on a rational choice model of marriage and
assuming that on average women earn less than men, we predict that
women are less likely to have an unpartnered birth when rules for
the division of joint property are more advantageous to spouses
with lower earnings. We derive more predictions regarding the
effects of age, non-intact home, and religiosity, and the
interaction between these variables and legal regime regarding
divorce. We test our predictions with retrospective data from the
Family Fertility Surveys collected in the 1990s. Most of our
predictions are confirmed by a multi-country analysis for 17 legal
regimes in 12 Western countries as well as single-country analyses
for four countries. Our major findings are that the likelihood of
an unpartnered birth is higher in countries that offer most women
less access to joint property in case of divorce, and that this
effect is weaker for teenagers than for women in their
twenties.