The fertility of foreign immigrants after their arrival: The Italian case

Similar documents
The fertility of immigrant women: family dynamics, migration, and timing of childbearing 1

Fertility Behavior of 1.5 and Second Generation Turkish Migrants in Germany

Small Effects of Selective Migration and Selective Survival in Retrospective Studies of Fertility

Dimensions and Determinants of Immigrant Integration. The Role of Origin and Settlement

FERTILITY OF IMMIGRANT WOMEN IN ITALY: OUTCOMES FROM UNCONVENTIONAL DATA 1

INDIVIDUAL AND HOUSEHOLD CHARACTERISTICS AND MIGRATORY MODELS OF IMMIGRANTS IN CAMPANIA 1

Migrant Fertility in Europe: Accelerated Decline During the Recession Period?

Estimating the fertility of recent migrants to England and Wales ( ) is there an elevated level of fertility after migration?

Migration effects of fertility. The case of Russian migrants in Estonia

Fertility Behavior of Migrants and Nonmigrants from a Couple Perspective: The Case of Senegalese in Europe

Demographic Research Monographs

Effects of migration on fertility patterns of non-native women in Spain

Introduction: The State of Europe s Population, 2003

Cohort fertility of migrant women in the Netherlands

ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL RESEARCH COUNCIL END OF AWARD REPORT

Births and fertility among the resident population

Levels of recent union formation: Six European countries compared

INTEGRATION OF THE SECOND GENERATION IN ITALY: DATA ON SCHOOL INCLUSION PATHS

Family dynamics among immigrants and their descendants in Estonia. Leen Rahnu, Allan Puur, Luule Sakkeus, Martin Klesment

Low fertility in Europe: Regional contrasts and policy responses

Recent demographic trends

The Impact of International Migration on the Labour Market Behaviour of Women left-behind: Evidence from Senegal Abstract Introduction

VOLUME 17, ARTICLE 29, PAGES PUBLISHED 20 DECEMBER DOI: /DemRes

DOES MIGRATION DISRUPT FERTILITY? A TEST USING THE MALAYSIAN FAMILY LIFE SURVEY

VOLUME 17, ARTICLE 25, PAGES PUBLISHED 20 DECEMBER DOI: /DemRes

High fertility in city suburbs: compositional or contextual effects?

Childbearing Patterns of Foreign Women in a New Immigration Country. The Case of Spain par Marta Roig VILA et Teresa Castro MARTÍN

A summary of Special Collection 3: Contemporary Research on European Fertility: Perspectives and Developments

Male immigrants fertility in Spain

Ethnicity, Migration, and Educational Achievement:

The Transition Generation s entrance to parenthood: Patterns across 27 post-socialist countries

POPULATION AGEING: a Cross-Disciplinary Approach Harokopion University, Tuesday 25 May 2010 Drawing the profile of elder immigrants in Greece

1 Introduction: Muslim prolificacy and demographic transition

Reproductive behaviour of migrant women in Germany: Data, patterns and determinants

Onward, return, repeated and circular migration among immigrants of Moroccan origin. Merging datasets as a strategy for testing migration theories.

RECENT POPULATION CHANGE IN EUROPE

Projecting the demographic impact of Syrian migration in a rapidly ageing society, Germany

Patterns of immigration in the new immigration countries

Family Dynamics in a Changing Europe 7.5 ECTS credits (5 p)

Gender, age and migration in official statistics The availability and the explanatory power of official data on older BME women

Extended Abstract. Respect at Borders, Respect of Borders: the Italian experience. Raimondo Cagiano de Azevedo, Elena Ambrosetti 1.

Marriage, childbearing, and migration in Kyrgyzstan: Exploring interdependencies

VOLUME 33, ARTICLE 10, PAGES PUBLISHED 4 AUGUST DOI: /DemRes

The Contribution of Mothers of Foreign Descent to Total Fertility: the Recent Recovery of Period Fertility in the Flemish Region of Belgium

DETERMINANTS OF IMMIGRANTS EARNINGS IN THE ITALIAN LABOUR MARKET: THE ROLE OF HUMAN CAPITAL AND COUNTRY OF ORIGIN

How international migration impacts fertility? The role of migrant networks, spouse s migration, and own migration

Determinants of Women s Migration in Turkey

Between here and there. Immigrant fertility patterns in Germany.

Divorce risks of immigrants in Sweden

3Z 3 STATISTICS IN FOCUS eurostat Population and social conditions 1995 D 3

ISSN Methodologies and Working papers. Demographic Outlook. National reports on the demographic developments in 2007.

THE MEASUREMENT OF IMMIGRANTS STOCK: IMMIGRANTS, FOREIGNERS AND NATURALIZED CITIZENS ACCORDING TO ITALY S 2001 POPULATION CENSUS

Annalisa Busetta, Valeria Cetorelli,

New forms of European citizenship in migration era. Survey data on Perception of Migration

The new demographic and social challenges in Spain: the aging process and the immigration

The Changing Relationship between Fertility and Economic Development: Evidence from 256 Sub-National European Regions Between 1996 to 2010

Mother tongue, host country income and return migration

Simultaneous Modeling of Heterogeneous Subpopulations within one Framework

Marrying transnationally? The Role of Migration in Explaining the Timing and Type of Partnership Formation Among the Senegalese

STATISTICS OF THE POPULATION WITH A FOREIGN BACKGROUND, BASED ON POPULATION REGISTER DATA. Submitted by Statistics Netherlands 1

CHANGES IN FAMILY POLICY IN LATVIA

Pronatalist Population Policy Options in South Korea s Sub-Replacement Fertility Transition

The Migration and Integration of Moroccan and Ukrainian migrants in Italy: Policies and Measures

High Fertility in City Suburbs: Compositional or Contextual Effects?

(606) Migration in Developing Countries Internal migration in Indonesia: Mobility behaviour in the 1993 Indonesian Family Life Survey

LIFESTYLES OF IMMIGRANT HOUSEHOLDS: A STATISTICAL ANALYSIS ON THE DATASET EU-SILC

A tool for evaluating integration processes. Gian Carlo Blangiardo Fondazione Ismu / Università di Milano Bicocca

REPORT OF THE WORK SESSION ON DEMOGRAPHIC PROJECTIONS

Demographic indicators

Measuring migration: strengths and weaknesses in the context of European requirements

VOLUME 28, ARTICLE 37, PAGES PUBLISHED 28 MAY DOI: /DemRes

Immigrant mothers, Spanish babies: Longing for a baby-boom in a lowest-low fertility society

The Effect of Migratory Behavior on Fertility in Fujian, China

The proportion of the UK population aged under 16 dropped below the proportion over state pension age for the first time in (Table 1.

Migration and Fertility. Polish Migrant Families in Ireland and Non-Migrant Families in Poland: A Comparison of Fertility Plans and Behaviour

VOLUME 19, ARTICLE 2, PAGES 5-14 PUBLISHED 01 JULY DOI: /DemRes

Family Dynamics Among Immigrants and Their Descendants in Europe: Current Research and Opportunities

The contribution of mothers of foreign nationality to the recent recovery of period fertility in Flanders (Belgium)

Number of marriages increases and number of divorces decreases; infant mortality rate is the lowest ever

Title: Religious Differences in Wome n s Fertility and Labour Force Participation in France Nitzan Peri-Rotem

Is replacement migration actually taking place in low fertility countries? Francesco C. BILLARI* and Gianpiero DALLA-ZUANNA**

People. Population size and growth

Immigration and its Effects on Demographic Change in Spain

MARRIAGE & PARENTHOOD

FEMALE AND MALE MIGRATION PATTERNS INTO THE URBAN SLUMS OF NAIROBI, : EVIDENCE OF FEMINISATION OF MIGRATION?

Migrant population of the UK

Population Dynamics in Poland, : Internal Migration and Marital Status Changes

EU Labour Markets from Boom to Recession: Are Foreign Workers More Excluded or Better Adapted?

Transitions to residential independence among young second generation migrants in the UK: The role of ethnic identity

Fertility rate and employment rate: how do they interact to each other?

Lowest-low fertility and home-ownership regimes

Determinants of Return Migration to Mexico Among Mexicans in the United States

Employment and Unemployment in the EU. Structural Dynamics and Trends 1 Authors: Ph.D. Marioara Iordan 2

Natural population increase (%)

Note by Task Force on measurement of the socio-economic conditions of migrants

Paper for Session 93: Europe and the Maghreb: demographic ties

Partner Choice and Timing of First Marriage among the Children of Immigrants in Norway and Sweden

Summary of the Results

Discussion Paper Series

METOIKOS Project Regional Workshop IV - Rome

Transcription:

The fertility of foreign immigrants after their arrival: The Italian case Eleonora Mussino 1 and Salvatore Strozza 2 Introduction This work presents an analysis of the reproductive behavior of foreign women with particular attention to those that migrated to Italy. Migrant fertility influences the period fertility rate (TFR) and by using a micro and macro approach, this study shows that the effect varies by country of origin, which demonstrates that the contribution of migrant fertility is complex and that foreigners do not always have high fertility. The study is of special value in the Italian context, where the decline in the TFR in recent decades has been particularly strong, even compared to many other European countries. It is generally known that Italian fertility is one of the lowest in the world (Delgado Perez and Livi Bacci, 1992). The slight increase recorded in the last few years in Italy is in part attributed to the presence of foreign women, and the significant increase in the foreign female population of childbearing age raises questions about the future influence of their fertility patterns. In Italy, several studies have focused on the impact of foreigners on period TFR for the country, but fewer studies analyze the determinants and the influence of the migration on the propensity to have children in Italy. The international literature highlights a strong impact on period fertility effect due to the high risk shortly after the migration (Alders, 2000), so an increase in the number of immigrants may have a direct influence on the TFR. But different citizenship groups have different propensities (Andersson, 2004, Sobotka, 2008), so the composition of the immigrant flow has to be taken into account. Clearly, the fertility of foreign women is a central factor for the increase of fertility (Billari, 2008). Even if it contributes only in part to the recent increase in total fertility, it has had a more important role in pushing the TFR in Italy than in other European countries (Goldstein et al., 2009). This study describes the propensity to have a child in the host country, with particular attention to the impact of citizenship on the choice of having a child. Owing to the lack of specific data, record linkage procedures were implemented in order to consider different administrative sources. By this means, it was possible to construct longitudinal datasets and to follow the individual trajectories. The originality of this work is the use of a longitudinal approach to Italian administrative data on births and migration by implementing deterministic and probabilistic record linkage procedures; 1 Phd Student - Department of Social Economic, Actuarial and Demographic Studies "Sapienza" University of Rome 2 Full Professor - Department of statistical Science Federico II, University of Naples

consequently, the creation of a dataset ad hoc, making it possible to study for the first time not only the reproductive behavior of the foreign parent, but also to follow a cohort of immigrants and study the transition to their first child in Italy. Data The aim of this work is to study the reproductive behavior of foreign mothers in Italy. The literature shows that migration and fertility may be strongly connected and that the migration history and duration of stay should be included in an analysis of reproductive behavior of foreign women (Milewsky, 2010, Toulemon and Mazuy, 2004). However, the official sources available today in Italy do not allow us to study more than one of these two demographic behaviors simultaneously, especially as part of a longitudinal approach. To overcome these limits in the data and to give proper importance to the information from administrative sources, therefore, we implemented a record linkage between two different datasets for different years: the Survey on Live Births of the resident population in Italy between 2003 and 2006 and resident permit registers of 2003. More in detail we linked all women who arrived in Italy in 2003 with the Survey on Live Births. In this way, we added information on fertility for a recently-immigrated cohort of foreign women. Using this approach, we followed 25,402 women from Albania, Romania, and Morocco recorded in 2003 in Italy, and who later gave birth to their first child in the host country. A total of 6,436 mothers were individualized through this procedure. The follow figure shows the Lexis diagram where calendar time for the years 2003 2007 is plotted on the horizontal axis, and duration in years since immigration on the vertical. We follow the 2003 cohort of foreign immigrants and plot their events (represented by the areas) that are their first births in Italy. Figure 1: Lexis diagram for the 2003 cohort of immigrant women

Method Using the data on the 2003 cohort of foreign immigrants, we estimated the hazard ratio of having a first birth in Italy using the piecewise-exponential model (Blossfeld and Rohwer, 2002, Allison, 1984). For the process of having a first birth, the entry in the process was the arrival time in Italy, which was assumed to be constant within each segment after 0, 12, 18, 24, and 36 months but might vary across them. We started by considering all women in the sample. In later models, we also included only women aged less than 20 years 3 because we assumed that for them the first birth in Italy is also the first child in general. Women who did not have a child during the observation window were right-censored at the end of 2006. It was not possible to censor those who left Italy or died during the observation at the exact time when the event happened. Therefore we decided to run another model just for women for whom it was possible to control whether they were still living in Italy at 1 January 2007. This last model has to be considered just as a control study because the assumptions made for the record linkage procedure were too weak. The available independent variables do not cover all the aspects but allow to contribute to the international debate. Diverse fertility behavior can be associated with cultural differences between the countries of origin (Andersson, 2004). As an indicator of this cultural effect, we inserted the variable citizenship of the mother into the models, assuming it to be the most important factor to explain the heterogeneity between the groups. Toulemon showed (2004) that the age at arrival can have different impact on the reproductive behaviors. This variable was categorized into five age groups (<=20, 21 25, 26 30, 31 35, 36+). Another aspect of the duration of stay was considered by including in the analysis the deadline for the residence permit: we categorized this as determinate if any date was specified, otherwise indeterminate. We also considered the place of arrival, as previous Italian studies had shown that immigrants have different patterns and behaviors in Italy (Blangiardo, 2009, Terzera, 2006). Italian territory was divided into the geographical divisions of North-East, North-West, Central, and South & Islands. Milewsky (2010) assumes that, for the first immigrant generation, marriage before migration influences fertility after the move. Accordingly, marital status at arrival is also included in the analysis ( married vs. other ). Different motivations for migration can have different impacts on reproductive behavior. Generally, this is studied as the interrelation between process, and thus strongly linked with data quality (Courgeau and Lelievre, 2006). In this case, we had the information on the reason for residence permit, which helped to understand at least formally the individual s choice of migration. The reasons were categorized as work, family, health, and other. 3 This was always under the assumption that is important to distinguish by parity in the study of fertility of immigrants.

Results The analysis of the propensity to have a first child in Italy confirms that it is important to distinguish among the citizenships of the three groups of women. The residence permit characteristics may affect the decision to have a child and the opportunity to stay for a longer period is positively linked with the hazard ratio. The high risk for family reasons and the fact that there are permits issued for pregnancy reasons proves the hypothesis of interrelated events: women move for reasons of family formation. This is also confirmed by the greater risk of childbearing for already married women. The variable duration of stay for this recent cohort of foreign immigrants does not confirm the disruption hypothesis but is more of an arrival effect. The hazard is higher shortly after migration and then slowly decreases. The short period of observation window does not allow the testing of adaptive behavior. The propensity to have a first child in the host country decreases with the increase of age at arrival, and this is linked with the biological factor. Further results will be available in time for the PAA meeting. Discussion From the Italian overview at macro level (e.g. ISTAT, 2007) and from the individual results reported, this work confirms that the factor that mainly influences and explains the strong heterogeneity in the reproductive behavior of foreign women is the country of origin (Alders, 2000, Andersson, 2004, Schoorl, 1990, Sobotka, 2008). Besides the strong arrival effect for the new cohort of foreign immigrants on the risk of having a birth in Italy can be explained by the strong interrelation between the migration and family behaviors (reunification, union, and fertility). This is also confirmed by the high risk of childbearing for women who come for family reasons and for women who are already married when they migrate. These results help to understand how the trend for Italian women could be increasing while the TFR of foreign women is slowly declining. In fact recent immigrants are increasingly coming from lower-fertility countries, especially from Eastern and South-Eastern Europe. Developments such as these would facilitate population forecasts or local planning concerns such as programming access to kindergarten. References Alders, M. (2000) Cohort fertility of migrant women in the Netherlands. BSPS-NVD-URU Conference. Utrecht, the Netherlands. Andersson, G. (2004) Childbearing after migration: Fertility patterns of foreign-born women in Sweden. International Migration Review, 38, 747-774. Billari, F. C. (2008) Lowest-low fertility in Europe: Exploring the causes and finding some surprises. Japanese Journal of Population 6, 2-18. Blangiardo, G. C. (2009) Immigrazione straniera e fecondità: un rapporto in evoluzione. Neodemos. Firenze.

Courgeau, D. & Lelievre, E. (2006) Motivations for Migration. In Caselli, G., Vallin, J. & Wunsch, G. (Eds.) Demography: analysis and synthesis. Burligton, San Diego, London, Elsevier. Delgado Perez, M. & Livi Bacci, M. (1992) Fertility in Italy and Spain: the Lowest in the World. Family Planning, vol. 24, No. 4, 32-51. Goldstein, J. R., Sobotka, T. & Jasilioniene, A. (2009) The end of "lowest-low" fertility? Population and Development Review, 35, 663-699. ISTAT (2007) La popolazione straniera residente in Italia al 1 gennaio 2007. In Cultura, P. I. E. (Ed.) Statistiche in Breve. Roma, Istat. Milewski, N. (2010) Fertility of Immigrants: A Two-Generational Approach in Germany Heidelberg, Dordrecht, London, New York, Springer. Schoorl, J. J. (1990) Fertility Adaptation of Turkish and Moroccan Women in the Netherlands. International Migration 28, 477-495. Sobotka, T. (2008) The rising importance of migrants for childbearing in Europe. Demographic Research, 19, 225-247. Terzera, L. (2006) Famiglia e fecondità. In Paterno, A., Strozza, S. & Terzera, L. (Eds.) Sospesi tra due rive: migrazioni e insediamenti di marocchini e albanesi. Milano, Franco Angeli Toulemon, L. (2004) Fertility among immigrant women: new data, a new approach. Population and Societies, 400. Toulemon, L. & Mazuy, M. (2004) Comment prendre en compte l âge à l arrivée et le durée de séjour en France dans la mesure de la fécondité des immigrants? Documents de travail Paris, INED..