The present paper develops a general equilibrium model with overlapping generations and endogenous fertility in order to analyze the interaction between public policy and household labor supply and fertility decisions. The model's benchmark equilibrium reflects the current family policy as well as the differential fertility pattern of educational groups in Germany. Then we simulate alternative reforms of child benefits and family taxation that increase the long-run fertility and growth rate of the economy. Our simulations indicate two central results: First, although households are typically hurt by the first-order effects of family policy, it is possible to generate long-run welfare gains due to positive second-order effects from induced c...
This paper studies the effect of different types of child subsidies on the economic allocation and t...
We examine how far fertility trends respond to family policies in OECD countries. In the light of th...
We examine how far fertility trends respond to family policies in OECD countries. In the light of th...
Standard-Nutzungsbedingungen: Die Dokumente auf EconStor dürfen zu eigenen wissenschaftlichen Zwecke...
We estimate a structural life-cycle model of fertility and female labour supply and use it to evalu...
We estimate a structural life-cycle model of fertility and female labour supply and use it to evalu...
We estimate a structural life-cycle model of fertility and female labour supply and use it to evalu...
Historically, in virtually all developed economies there seems to be clear evidence of an inverse re...
In this paper we develop a structural model of female employment and fertility which accounts for in...
Based on a structural model of fertility and female labour force supply with unobserved heterogenei...
We estimate a structural life-cycle model of fertility and female labour supply and use it to evalu...
In this paper, we apply an Overlapping Generations (OLG) model with endogenous fertility and a pay a...
We examine how far fertility trends respond to family policies in OECD countries. In the light of th...
We examine how far fertility trends respond to family policies in OECD countries. In the light of th...
This paper studies the effect of different types of child subsidies on the economic allocation and t...
This paper studies the effect of different types of child subsidies on the economic allocation and t...
We examine how far fertility trends respond to family policies in OECD countries. In the light of th...
We examine how far fertility trends respond to family policies in OECD countries. In the light of th...
Standard-Nutzungsbedingungen: Die Dokumente auf EconStor dürfen zu eigenen wissenschaftlichen Zwecke...
We estimate a structural life-cycle model of fertility and female labour supply and use it to evalu...
We estimate a structural life-cycle model of fertility and female labour supply and use it to evalu...
We estimate a structural life-cycle model of fertility and female labour supply and use it to evalu...
Historically, in virtually all developed economies there seems to be clear evidence of an inverse re...
In this paper we develop a structural model of female employment and fertility which accounts for in...
Based on a structural model of fertility and female labour force supply with unobserved heterogenei...
We estimate a structural life-cycle model of fertility and female labour supply and use it to evalu...
In this paper, we apply an Overlapping Generations (OLG) model with endogenous fertility and a pay a...
We examine how far fertility trends respond to family policies in OECD countries. In the light of th...
We examine how far fertility trends respond to family policies in OECD countries. In the light of th...
This paper studies the effect of different types of child subsidies on the economic allocation and t...
This paper studies the effect of different types of child subsidies on the economic allocation and t...
We examine how far fertility trends respond to family policies in OECD countries. In the light of th...
We examine how far fertility trends respond to family policies in OECD countries. In the light of th...