Recent theoretical developments in growth models, triggered particularly by unified theories of growth, suggest that the child quantity-quality trade-off is a defining element in our explanation of a transition from Malthusian stagnation to a sustained growth path. This paper presents a model and derive a testable empirical framework to investigate the role of gender in the trade-off between education and fertility for 86 French counties during the 19th century. Endogeneity-mitigated mean- and median-based regressions offer robust empirical predictions for gender-empowered quality-quantity trade-off. In particular, we find the existence of a significant and negative association between education and fertility. Further, while gaging the diff...
Gender inequality in human capital has been shown to be an important indicator of economic developme...
The interaction between investment in children’s education and parental fertility is crucial in rec...
While women's employment opportunities, relative wages, and the child quantity–quality trade-off hav...
Recent theoretical developments in growth models, triggered particularly by unified theories of grow...
Recent theoretical developments of growth models, especially on unified theories of growth, suggest ...
International audienceThe education-fertility relationship is a central element of the models explai...
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...
Unified growth theory suggests the fertility decline was crucial for achieving long-term growth, yet...
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...
The assumption that education and fertility are endogenous decisions that react to economic circumst...
The trade-off between child quantity and education is a crucial ingredient of unified growth models ...
Knowledge of the long relationship between gender equality and economic growth is hampered by the la...
The trade-off between child quantity and quality is a crucial ingredient of unified growth models th...
Gender inequality in human capital has been shown to be an important indicator of economic developme...
The interaction between investment in children’s education and parental fertility is crucial in rec...
While women's employment opportunities, relative wages, and the child quantity–quality trade-off hav...
Recent theoretical developments in growth models, triggered particularly by unified theories of grow...
Recent theoretical developments of growth models, especially on unified theories of growth, suggest ...
International audienceThe education-fertility relationship is a central element of the models explai...
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...
Unified growth theory suggests the fertility decline was crucial for achieving long-term growth, yet...
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...
The assumption that education and fertility are endogenous decisions that react to economic circumst...
The trade-off between child quantity and education is a crucial ingredient of unified growth models ...
Knowledge of the long relationship between gender equality and economic growth is hampered by the la...
The trade-off between child quantity and quality is a crucial ingredient of unified growth models th...
Gender inequality in human capital has been shown to be an important indicator of economic developme...
The interaction between investment in children’s education and parental fertility is crucial in rec...
While women's employment opportunities, relative wages, and the child quantity–quality trade-off hav...