Based on Becker's (1965) insight that consumption is costly in terms of both time and money, this paper extends the existing literature by assuming that the consumption of quantities is relatively time-intensive, while the consumption of qualities is relatively money-intensive. The analysis implies that the quantity of children is positively correlated with income only when incomes are relatively low. When people's incomes increase to a certain threshold level, fertility rate will decrease and will ultimately approach to a certain stable level as incomes rise. On the other hand, the analysis implies that the quality of children is not strongly correlated with income with incomes are low. However, when people's incomes reach a certain thresh...
My new theory of the economic determinants of fertility is that greater human capital induces parent...
Evolutionary explanations of low fertility in modern affluent societies commonly state that low fert...
Abstract Growth theorists have recently argued that western nations grew rich by parents substitutin...
Based on Becker’s (1965) insight that consumption is costly in terms of both time and money, this pa...
We study the Becker and Lewis (1973) quantity–quality model of children adding an explicit child car...
We study the Becker and Lewis (1973) quantity-quality model of children adding an explicit child car...
When defining and estimating the cost of children and equivalent incomes, children's consumption is ...
We study the Becker and Lewis (1973) quantity-quality model of children adding an explicit child car...
Neoclassical theory of consumer behavior posits a static framework for utility maximization from mic...
The standard methods of measuring the cost of children are flawed because of the endogeneity of fert...
In this paper I study the dynamic implications of household decisions that determine fertility and h...
Parents face a number of decisions that involve a trade-off between the amount of time and money the...
This paper tries to analyze changes in the allocation of time decided by mothers and how their chara...
The major objective of this study was to investigate whether there is a trade-off between quantity a...
This paper develops a theory of fertility that offers an explanation for the persistence of poverty ...
My new theory of the economic determinants of fertility is that greater human capital induces parent...
Evolutionary explanations of low fertility in modern affluent societies commonly state that low fert...
Abstract Growth theorists have recently argued that western nations grew rich by parents substitutin...
Based on Becker’s (1965) insight that consumption is costly in terms of both time and money, this pa...
We study the Becker and Lewis (1973) quantity–quality model of children adding an explicit child car...
We study the Becker and Lewis (1973) quantity-quality model of children adding an explicit child car...
When defining and estimating the cost of children and equivalent incomes, children's consumption is ...
We study the Becker and Lewis (1973) quantity-quality model of children adding an explicit child car...
Neoclassical theory of consumer behavior posits a static framework for utility maximization from mic...
The standard methods of measuring the cost of children are flawed because of the endogeneity of fert...
In this paper I study the dynamic implications of household decisions that determine fertility and h...
Parents face a number of decisions that involve a trade-off between the amount of time and money the...
This paper tries to analyze changes in the allocation of time decided by mothers and how their chara...
The major objective of this study was to investigate whether there is a trade-off between quantity a...
This paper develops a theory of fertility that offers an explanation for the persistence of poverty ...
My new theory of the economic determinants of fertility is that greater human capital induces parent...
Evolutionary explanations of low fertility in modern affluent societies commonly state that low fert...
Abstract Growth theorists have recently argued that western nations grew rich by parents substitutin...