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Social Capital Related to Fertility: Theoretical Foundations and Empirical Evidence from Bulgaria

    Christoph Bühler, Dimiter Philipov

Vienna Yearbook of Population Research 2005, pp. 53-81, 2024/12/12

doi: 10.1553/populationyearbook2005s53


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doi:10.1553/populationyearbook2005



doi:10.1553/populationyearbook2005s53

Abstract

Interpersonal relationships of support have been found to be an important factor in individual fertility intentions in Central and Eastern European countries. The foundations of this positive influence have not been well explored to date, however. We present a theoretical discussion on exchange-based social capital and argue that processes of interpersonal exchange are relevant for reproductive decisions when they provide access to resources that help to reduce the costs of having children and stabilise the economic situation of a household. Data from 2002 on the fertility intentions of 2,016 Bulgarian women support our argument. The availability of important and substantive resources has a positive impact on women’s intentions to have a second or third child and their timing of having a first or second child. The embededness in kin-based exchange systems of indirect reciprocity shows similar positive effects and highlights especially the significance of parents as a source of intergenerational transfers and support.