Unified growth theory suggests the fertility decline was crucial for achieving long-term growth, yet the causes behind that decline are still not entirely clear from an empirical point of view. In particular for France, the first country to experience this demographic transition in the European context, the reasons why some areas of the country had lower fertility than others are poorly under-stood. Using département level data for the last quarter of the nineteenth cen-tury, this paper exploits the French regional variation to study the correlates of fertility, estimating various fixed-effects models. The findings confirm the im-portance of some of the forces suggested by standard fertility choice models. Education in general, female edu...
The Demographic Transition enabled the productivity advances of the Industrial Revolution to be chan...
Despite some disagreements about specific timing, it is now widely accepted that France was the firs...
Why did France experience the demographic transition first? This question remains one of the greates...
Recent developments in endogenous growth theory suggest fertility decline in the context of the demo...
International audienceThe education-fertility relationship is a central element of the models explai...
The education–fertility relationship is a central element of the models explaining the transition to...
We analyze how much a rational-choice model can explain the temporal and spatial variation in fertil...
Recent theoretical developments in growth models, triggered particularly by unified theories of grow...
We analyze how much a core rational-choice model can explain the temporal and spatial variation in f...
We analyze how much a core rational-choice model can explain the temporal and spatial variation in f...
Recent theoretical developments in growth models, triggered particularly by unified theories of grow...
We investigate the historical dynamics of the decline in fertility in Europe and its relation to mea...
Recent theoretical developments of growth models, especially on unified theories of growth, suggest ...
To better understand the forces underlying fertility decisions, we look at the forerunners of fertil...
To better understand the forces underlying fertility decisions, we look at the forerunners of fertil...
The Demographic Transition enabled the productivity advances of the Industrial Revolution to be chan...
Despite some disagreements about specific timing, it is now widely accepted that France was the firs...
Why did France experience the demographic transition first? This question remains one of the greates...
Recent developments in endogenous growth theory suggest fertility decline in the context of the demo...
International audienceThe education-fertility relationship is a central element of the models explai...
The education–fertility relationship is a central element of the models explaining the transition to...
We analyze how much a rational-choice model can explain the temporal and spatial variation in fertil...
Recent theoretical developments in growth models, triggered particularly by unified theories of grow...
We analyze how much a core rational-choice model can explain the temporal and spatial variation in f...
We analyze how much a core rational-choice model can explain the temporal and spatial variation in f...
Recent theoretical developments in growth models, triggered particularly by unified theories of grow...
We investigate the historical dynamics of the decline in fertility in Europe and its relation to mea...
Recent theoretical developments of growth models, especially on unified theories of growth, suggest ...
To better understand the forces underlying fertility decisions, we look at the forerunners of fertil...
To better understand the forces underlying fertility decisions, we look at the forerunners of fertil...
The Demographic Transition enabled the productivity advances of the Industrial Revolution to be chan...
Despite some disagreements about specific timing, it is now widely accepted that France was the firs...
Why did France experience the demographic transition first? This question remains one of the greates...