To better understand the forces underlying fertility decisions, we look at the forerunners of fertility decline. In Rouen, France, completed fertility dropped between 1640 and 1792 from 7.4 to 4.2 children. We review possible explanations and keep only three: increases in materialism, in women’s empowerment, and in returns to education. The methodology is one of analytic narrative, bringing together descriptive evidence with a theoretical model. We accordingly propose a theory showing that we can discriminate between these explanations by looking at childlessness and its social gradient. An increase in materialism or, under certain conditions, in women’s empowerment, leads to an increase in childlessness, while an increase in the return to ...
The spectacularly early decline of French fertility is one of the great puzzles of economic history....
International audienceThe education-fertility relationship is a central element of the models explai...
The spectacularly early decline of French fertility is one of the great puzzles of economic history....
To better understand the forces underlying fertility decisions, we look at the forerunners of fertil...
It has been long established that the demographic transition began in eighteenth-century France, yet...
It has been long established that the demographic transition began in eighteenth-century France, yet...
It has been long established that the demographic transition began in eighteenth-century France, yet...
It has been long established that the demographic transition began in eighteenth-century France, yet...
The Demographic Transition enabled the productivity advances of the Industrial Revolution to be chan...
We investigate the historical dynamics of the decline in fertility in Europe and its relation to mea...
Unified growth theory suggests the fertility decline was crucial for achieving long-term growth, yet...
In this paper, I argue that living with no or few children and low fertility was widespread in pre-i...
This study focuses on the decline of marital fertility between 1851 and 1891 in the French departmen...
Recent developments in endogenous growth theory suggest fertility decline in the context of the demo...
The education–fertility relationship is a central element of the models explaining the transition to...
The spectacularly early decline of French fertility is one of the great puzzles of economic history....
International audienceThe education-fertility relationship is a central element of the models explai...
The spectacularly early decline of French fertility is one of the great puzzles of economic history....
To better understand the forces underlying fertility decisions, we look at the forerunners of fertil...
It has been long established that the demographic transition began in eighteenth-century France, yet...
It has been long established that the demographic transition began in eighteenth-century France, yet...
It has been long established that the demographic transition began in eighteenth-century France, yet...
It has been long established that the demographic transition began in eighteenth-century France, yet...
The Demographic Transition enabled the productivity advances of the Industrial Revolution to be chan...
We investigate the historical dynamics of the decline in fertility in Europe and its relation to mea...
Unified growth theory suggests the fertility decline was crucial for achieving long-term growth, yet...
In this paper, I argue that living with no or few children and low fertility was widespread in pre-i...
This study focuses on the decline of marital fertility between 1851 and 1891 in the French departmen...
Recent developments in endogenous growth theory suggest fertility decline in the context of the demo...
The education–fertility relationship is a central element of the models explaining the transition to...
The spectacularly early decline of French fertility is one of the great puzzles of economic history....
International audienceThe education-fertility relationship is a central element of the models explai...
The spectacularly early decline of French fertility is one of the great puzzles of economic history....