During the last few decades, China implemented college enrollment expansion to accelerate the process of urbanization. However, most existing papers blaming that receiving higher education may delay people choosing to enter the age of first marriage, which in turn results in the age of the population. In this paper, we argued that the previous papers confused the total impact of higher education on the average age of the first marriage with the influence on individual’s behavior change, and thus led to overestimating the delayed effect of higher education on the age choosing behavior of first marriage. The present paper re-estimated the impact of higher education on the average age of the first marriage in China with both extensive and inte...
Background: Since the mid-1990s, South Korea has undergone two remarkable social changes: a large-sc...
In industrialized nations, sibship size generally depresses educational attainment: the larger the n...
<b>Objective</b>: Chinese media labels highly educated, urban women who are still single in their la...
China’s higher education expansion policy started in 1999. It brought about rapid increase not only ...
Objective: Drawing on the preference-opportunity framework of union formation, we compare patterns o...
I investigate the impact of post-secondary college education quality on marriage outcomes. Using NLS...
Background: Family change in China is characterized by increasing divorce rates and a growing number...
Purpose: Premarital cohabitation has increased dramatically in China in the last few decades. Past s...
The Chinese urban society in recent years has shown rising age at first marriage and declining marri...
This study explores the extent to which changes in age-at-marriage laws are effective in curbing ear...
Does more schooling causes a delay in marriage? Using a nationwide change in the compulsory schoolin...
Background: Chinese women's age at first marriage increased for more than three years on average dur...
Some phenomena that occur in the present day may have also occurred a long time ago. In this study, ...
Applying discrete-time hazard models to person-year data constructed from 1% microdata sample of 201...
Using population intercensus and national survey data, we examine marriage timing in urban China spa...
Background: Since the mid-1990s, South Korea has undergone two remarkable social changes: a large-sc...
In industrialized nations, sibship size generally depresses educational attainment: the larger the n...
<b>Objective</b>: Chinese media labels highly educated, urban women who are still single in their la...
China’s higher education expansion policy started in 1999. It brought about rapid increase not only ...
Objective: Drawing on the preference-opportunity framework of union formation, we compare patterns o...
I investigate the impact of post-secondary college education quality on marriage outcomes. Using NLS...
Background: Family change in China is characterized by increasing divorce rates and a growing number...
Purpose: Premarital cohabitation has increased dramatically in China in the last few decades. Past s...
The Chinese urban society in recent years has shown rising age at first marriage and declining marri...
This study explores the extent to which changes in age-at-marriage laws are effective in curbing ear...
Does more schooling causes a delay in marriage? Using a nationwide change in the compulsory schoolin...
Background: Chinese women's age at first marriage increased for more than three years on average dur...
Some phenomena that occur in the present day may have also occurred a long time ago. In this study, ...
Applying discrete-time hazard models to person-year data constructed from 1% microdata sample of 201...
Using population intercensus and national survey data, we examine marriage timing in urban China spa...
Background: Since the mid-1990s, South Korea has undergone two remarkable social changes: a large-sc...
In industrialized nations, sibship size generally depresses educational attainment: the larger the n...
<b>Objective</b>: Chinese media labels highly educated, urban women who are still single in their la...