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Soap Operas and Fertility: Evidence from Brazil

2012· article· en· 1,433 citations· W3123703439 on OpenAlex· 10.1257/app.4.4.1

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Abstract

We estimate the effect of television on fertility in Brazil, where soap operas portray small families. We exploit differences in the timing of entry into different markets of Globo, the main novela producer. Women living in areas covered by Globo have significantly lower fertility. The effect is strongest for women of lower socioeconomic status and in the central and late phases of fertility, consistent with stopping behavior. The result does not appear to be driven by selection in Globo entry. We provide evidence that novelas, and not just television, affected individual choices, based on children's naming patterns and novela content. (JEL J13, J16, L82, O15, Z13)

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The record

Venue
American Economic Journal Applied Economics
Topic
Media Influence and Politics
Field
Social Sciences
Canadian institutions
University of Ottawa
Funders
Keywords
FertilitySocioeconomic statusExploitSelection (genetic algorithm)AdvertisingDemographyPsychologySociologyBusinessComputer sciencePopulation
Has abstract in OpenAlex
yes