Economic explanations for the fertility transition focus on the role of returns to schooling, especially for women, which have encouraged women to obtain more education and facilitated the rise in women's wages relative to men's. The private opportunity costs of children have therefore increased, and parents have been motivated to substitute child schooling for additional births Declines in fertility have proceeded unevenly, first across the high income countries, and more recently across the low income countries. The cross sectional differentials in fertility are also frequently analyzed in household surveys, suggesting parallels with the cross-country comparisons. At an aggregate level, states have simultaneously legislated socialized sup...
There are significant economic implications of an ageing population and in developed societies the ...
We present evidence that the cross-sectional relationship between fertility and women’s education in...
This study summarizes patterns of educational differentials in wanted and unwanted fertility at diff...
Economic explanations for the fertility transition focus on the role of returns to schooling, especi...
The large declines in total fertility rates that have occurred in many low income countries since 19...
In every developed country, the economic transition from pre-industrial stagnation to modem growth w...
Every industrialized country once underwent a transition from Malthusian stag-nation to growth, acco...
This article presents a model of household fertility and child-rearing choice in which rising female...
Explanations for the evolutionary puzzle of fertility decline need a varied approach, a biosocial ap...
My new theory of the economic determinants of fertility is that greater human capital induces parent...
This paper presented a model where economic growth, via growth in female wages relative to male wage...
From 1958 to 2021, fertility rates in the United States have declined from 3.5 births per woman to 1...
This paper develops the theoretical foundations and the testable implications of the various mechani...
A window of opportunity for fast economic growth is created by sustained fertility decline. However,...
Fertility fell rapidly in developed countries in the second half of the twentieth century, a period ...
There are significant economic implications of an ageing population and in developed societies the ...
We present evidence that the cross-sectional relationship between fertility and women’s education in...
This study summarizes patterns of educational differentials in wanted and unwanted fertility at diff...
Economic explanations for the fertility transition focus on the role of returns to schooling, especi...
The large declines in total fertility rates that have occurred in many low income countries since 19...
In every developed country, the economic transition from pre-industrial stagnation to modem growth w...
Every industrialized country once underwent a transition from Malthusian stag-nation to growth, acco...
This article presents a model of household fertility and child-rearing choice in which rising female...
Explanations for the evolutionary puzzle of fertility decline need a varied approach, a biosocial ap...
My new theory of the economic determinants of fertility is that greater human capital induces parent...
This paper presented a model where economic growth, via growth in female wages relative to male wage...
From 1958 to 2021, fertility rates in the United States have declined from 3.5 births per woman to 1...
This paper develops the theoretical foundations and the testable implications of the various mechani...
A window of opportunity for fast economic growth is created by sustained fertility decline. However,...
Fertility fell rapidly in developed countries in the second half of the twentieth century, a period ...
There are significant economic implications of an ageing population and in developed societies the ...
We present evidence that the cross-sectional relationship between fertility and women’s education in...
This study summarizes patterns of educational differentials in wanted and unwanted fertility at diff...