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- W317807834 abstract "During the past decades Japanese demographers have kept saying that the delay in marriage and the increase in proportion never-married are major causes of fertility decline, but the policy makers have been concentrated their efforts on support for childrearing. This may not have been misdirected, considering the results of the comparative study by Kojima and Rallu(1997/1998), which revealed the larger contribution of marital fertility decline in Japan due to the lack of catch-up births and births by cohabiting couples in comparison with France. More recently, support measures for work-life balance has been occupying a larger share in the Government’s policy responses to very low fertility. Even though these support measures may have some effects on facilitating marriages, they are not directly encouraging marriages. Moreover, some scholars criticize the support measures for work-life balance for its tendency to favor only those couples in which both spouses work on a regular basis and consequently to increase socioeconomic inequality(Mackie 2002, Henninger et al. 2008). However, we have to also examine the feasibility of pro-marriage policy measures because socioeconomic inequality is considered to be a major cause for marriage delay and increased celibacy, while only some local governments in Japan have implemented pro-marriage measures. Other societies in East Asia, including South Korea and Taiwan, have experienced fertility decline more recently, but they tend to have intermarriage(marriage migrant)policy. On the other hand, Singapore has had low fertility during the past three decades and its Government implemented promarriage measures as a part of its pronatalistic family policy package. Thus, it would be more productive to compare the possible effects of family policy measures, including pro-marriage policy measures, in Japan and Singapore as well as South Korea. If the delay in marriage and childbearing is a kind of “silent” resistance of younger persons to their expected roles in the society(Riley 2006), we should be able Religion and Attitudes toward Family Policies in Japan, South Korea and Singapore" @default.
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- W317807834 date "2011-12-25" @default.
- W317807834 modified "2023-09-25" @default.
- W317807834 title "Religion and Attitudes toward Family Policies in Japan, South Korea and Singapore" @default.
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