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Featured researches published by Nicoletta Balbo.


Demography | 2016

The Role of Family Orientations in Shaping the Effect of Fertility on Subjective Well-being: A Propensity Score Matching Approach.

Nicoletta Balbo; Bruno Arpino

This article investigates whether and how having a child impacts an individual’s subjective well-being, while taking into account heterogeneity in family attitudes. People with different family orientations have different values, gender attitudes, preferences toward career and family, and expectations about how childbearing can affect their subjective well-being. These differences impact fertility decisions and the effect of parenthood on an individual’s life satisfaction. We define three groups of people based on their family orientations: Traditional, Mixed, and Modern. Applying propensity score matching on longitudinal data (British Household Panel Survey), we create groups of individuals with very similar socioeconomic characteristics and family orientations before childbearing. We then compare those who have one child with those who are childless, and those who have two children with those who have only one child. We show that parents are significantly more satisfied than nonparents, and this effect is stronger among men than among women. For men, we do not find significant differences across family orientations groups in the effect of the birth of the first child on life satisfaction. Among women, only Traditional mothers seem to be more satisfied than their childless counterparts. Women who have a second child are never more satisfied than those who have only one child, regardless of their family orientations. Traditional and Mixed men experience a gain in life satisfaction when they have a second child, but this effect is not found for Modern men.


European Journal of Ageing | 2018

Grandparenting, education and subjective well-being of older Europeans

Bruno Arpino; Valeria Bordone; Nicoletta Balbo

We study whether grandparenthood is associated with older people’s subjective well-being (SWB), considering the association with life satisfaction of having grandchildren per se, their number, and of the provision of grandchild care. Older people’s education may not only be an important confounder to control for, but also a moderator in the relation between grandparenthood-related variables and SWB. We investigate these issues by adopting a cross-country comparative perspective and using data from the Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe covering 20 countries. Our results show that grandparenthood has a stronger positive association with SWB in countries where intensive grandparental childcare is not common and less socially expected. Yet, this result is driven by a negative association between grandparenthood without grandparental childcare and SWB that we only found in countries where intensive grandparental childcare is widespread. Therefore, in accordance with the structural ambivalence theory, we argue that in countries where it is socially expected for grandparents to have a role as providers of childcare, not taking on such a role may negatively influence SWB. However, our results show that grandparental childcare (either intensive or not) is generally associated with higher SWB. Overall, we do not find support for a moderating effect of education. We also do not find striking differences by gender in the association between grandparenthood and SWB. The only noteworthy discrepancy refers to grandmothers being often more satisfied when they provide grandchild care.


European Journal of Population-revue Europeenne De Demographie | 2016

It Takes Two to Tango: Couples’ Happiness and Childbearing

Arnstein Aassve; Bruno Arpino; Nicoletta Balbo

The existing literature has so far considered the role of the individual’s subjective well-being on fertility, neglecting the importance of the partner’s well-being. Using data from the British Household Panel Survey (BHPS) and event history models estimated separately by parity, we find that in a couple, women’s happiness matters more than that of the male partner in terms of having the first child. Specifically, we observe that couples in which either partner is happier than usual are more at risk of having the first child, but the effect is stronger with higher happiness of the woman. For the transition to the second child, we find that couples in which the woman declares to be happier or less happy than usual have a lower risk of childbirth. We, moreover, find support for a multiplicative effect of partners’ SWB on the decision to have a first child. Our results show that failing to acknowledge that the subjective well-being of both partners matters for the inherently joint decision making of childbearing can lead to an incomplete view of how subjective well-being affects fertility.


Disasters | 2015

The impact of humanitarian context conditions and individual characteristics on aid worker retention

Valeska P. Korff; Nicoletta Balbo; Melinda Mills; Liesbet Heyse; Rafael Wittek


Archive | 2014

The role of family orientations in shaping the effect of fertility on subjective well­being

Nicoletta Balbo; Bruno Arpino


Archive | 2013

Friend and peer effects on entry into marriage and parenthood: A multiprocess approach

Nicoletta Balbo; Nicola Barban; Melinda Mills


Giornate di Studio sulla Popolazione 2017 | 2016

Multiple socio-economic contexts during adolescence and health behaviors in young adulthood

Nicoletta Balbo; Nicola Barban; Frank F. Furstenberg


Archive | 2014

Do parents have a happier life than non-parents? The role of preferences

Nicoletta Balbo; Bruno Arpino


Giornate di Studio sulla Popolazione 2015 | 2014

Life satisfaction of older Europeans: the role of grandchildren

Bruno Arpino; Nicoletta Balbo


European Population Conference (EPC) | 2014

Friend and peer effects on entry into marriage and parenthood : A multiprocess approach to interrelated family-formation processes

Nicoletta Balbo; Nicola Barban; Melinda Mills

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Bruno Arpino

Pompeu Fabra University

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Valeria Bordone

International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis

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