Abstract (may include machine translation)
Social reproduction scholars have made headway in integrating the analysis of capitalism, class, gender, and care. We offer two contributions to this literature. First, we provide a novel framework with insights into companies as sites of decommodification, shaping childcare cost distribution and affecting childbearing rates. Second, we extend social reproduction research geographically to the oft-overlooked region of Eastern Europe. Eastern Europe is home to 15 of the world’s 20 fastest-declining populations, with low fertility as a prime cause. We argue that privatization catalyzes commodification, raising work intensity and financial-temporal uncertainty and eroding collective resources for social reproduction, thereby impacting childbearing. We explore this mechanism quantitatively by employing four distinct definitions of privatization across two datasets: one covering 52 Hungarian towns (1989–2006) and another spanning 29 postsocialist countries (1989–2012). We shed light on the details of the mechanism through a qualitative analysis of 82 life-history interviews in four Hungarian towns, surveying the lived experience of privatization.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Number of pages | 46 |
| Journal | Archives Europeennes de Sociologie |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - 9 Feb 2026 |
Keywords
- Care
- Childbearing
- Commodification
- Eastern Europe
- Privatization
- Social Reproduction
Fingerprint
Dive into the research topics of 'Commodification and Social Reproduction: Theory and Mixed-Method Evidence on the Effect of Privatization on Childbearing'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.Cite this
- APA
- Author
- BIBTEX
- Harvard
- Standard
- RIS
- Vancouver