Does enrolment in single-sex schools affect marriage outcomes?

Low fertility rates in Singapore will reduce the labour force size and impede economic growth. Apart from encouraging more children, government interventions should focus on promoting marriage since families are the building blocks of society. This paper investigates whether different types of schoo...

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Main Authors: Chua, Kah Beng, Tan, Don Qun Heng
Other Authors: Leong Kaiwen
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/76725
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-767252019-12-10T13:02:09Z Does enrolment in single-sex schools affect marriage outcomes? Chua, Kah Beng Tan, Don Qun Heng Leong Kaiwen School of Social Sciences DRNTU::Social sciences::Sociology Low fertility rates in Singapore will reduce the labour force size and impede economic growth. Apart from encouraging more children, government interventions should focus on promoting marriage since families are the building blocks of society. This paper investigates whether different types of schooling affects marriage outcomes, specifically, whether individuals from single-sex schools spend more time searching for partners and have a lower probability of getting married. Using logistic regression models, we find that individuals from single-sex schools on average spend 14.3 months longer to search for partners and are 0.37 times as likely to get married compared to those from mixed schools, ceteris paribus. Individuals who plan to have more children and couples who prefer each specialising in either work or home production are also found to be more likely to get married. Robustness checks using other specifications and model reveal similar results. One other interesting finding is that individuals who enrolled in single-sex secondary schools have lower probability of getting married as opposed to those from single-sex primary schools. These results have many policy implications for the Singapore Government to examine so as to promote marriage and subsequently improve fertility rates. Bachelor of Arts in Economics 2019-04-08T04:46:46Z 2019-04-08T04:46:46Z 2019 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/76725 en 38 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Social sciences::Sociology
spellingShingle DRNTU::Social sciences::Sociology
Chua, Kah Beng
Tan, Don Qun Heng
Does enrolment in single-sex schools affect marriage outcomes?
description Low fertility rates in Singapore will reduce the labour force size and impede economic growth. Apart from encouraging more children, government interventions should focus on promoting marriage since families are the building blocks of society. This paper investigates whether different types of schooling affects marriage outcomes, specifically, whether individuals from single-sex schools spend more time searching for partners and have a lower probability of getting married. Using logistic regression models, we find that individuals from single-sex schools on average spend 14.3 months longer to search for partners and are 0.37 times as likely to get married compared to those from mixed schools, ceteris paribus. Individuals who plan to have more children and couples who prefer each specialising in either work or home production are also found to be more likely to get married. Robustness checks using other specifications and model reveal similar results. One other interesting finding is that individuals who enrolled in single-sex secondary schools have lower probability of getting married as opposed to those from single-sex primary schools. These results have many policy implications for the Singapore Government to examine so as to promote marriage and subsequently improve fertility rates.
author2 Leong Kaiwen
author_facet Leong Kaiwen
Chua, Kah Beng
Tan, Don Qun Heng
format Final Year Project
author Chua, Kah Beng
Tan, Don Qun Heng
author_sort Chua, Kah Beng
title Does enrolment in single-sex schools affect marriage outcomes?
title_short Does enrolment in single-sex schools affect marriage outcomes?
title_full Does enrolment in single-sex schools affect marriage outcomes?
title_fullStr Does enrolment in single-sex schools affect marriage outcomes?
title_full_unstemmed Does enrolment in single-sex schools affect marriage outcomes?
title_sort does enrolment in single-sex schools affect marriage outcomes?
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/76725
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