International audienceIn the light of the recent reversal of fertility trends in several highly developed countries, we investigate the impact of economic development and its components on fertility in OECD countries from 1960 to 2007. We find that the strong negative correlation between GDP per capita and fertility does no longer hold for high levels of per capita economic output; the relation instead seems to turn into positive from a certain threshold level of economic development on. Survival of an inverse J-shaped association between GDP per capita and fertility is found when controlling for birth postponement, omitted variable bias, non-stationarity and endogeneity. However, gaps between actual and predicted fertility rates show impli...
We examine how far fertility trends respond to family policies in OECD countries. In the light of th...
A fundamental reversal of the traditional fertility-development relationship has occurred in highly ...
The 1970s worries of the "population bomb" were replaced in the 1990s with concerns of population ag...
International audienceIn the light of the recent reversal of fertility trends in several highly deve...
We examine how far changes in fertility trends are related to ongoing economic development in OECD c...
We examine how far changes in fertility trends are related to ongoing economic development in OECD c...
Fertility fell rapidly in OECD countries in the second half of the twentieth century, a period marke...
Long-run impact of economic growth on fertility trends is ambiguous and sensitive for in-time variat...
Fertility fell rapidly in developed countries in the second half of the twentieth century, a period ...
Evidence for nation-states suggests that the long-standing negative relationship between fertility a...
Long-run impact of economic growth on fertility trends is ambiguous and sensitive for in-time variat...
This paper investigates whether there has been a fundamental change in the importance of economic co...
The large declines in total fertility rates that have occurred in many low income countries since 19...
This article presents a model of household fertility and child-rearing choice in which rising female...
The transition to market-oriented economies in Central and Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Unio...
We examine how far fertility trends respond to family policies in OECD countries. In the light of th...
A fundamental reversal of the traditional fertility-development relationship has occurred in highly ...
The 1970s worries of the "population bomb" were replaced in the 1990s with concerns of population ag...
International audienceIn the light of the recent reversal of fertility trends in several highly deve...
We examine how far changes in fertility trends are related to ongoing economic development in OECD c...
We examine how far changes in fertility trends are related to ongoing economic development in OECD c...
Fertility fell rapidly in OECD countries in the second half of the twentieth century, a period marke...
Long-run impact of economic growth on fertility trends is ambiguous and sensitive for in-time variat...
Fertility fell rapidly in developed countries in the second half of the twentieth century, a period ...
Evidence for nation-states suggests that the long-standing negative relationship between fertility a...
Long-run impact of economic growth on fertility trends is ambiguous and sensitive for in-time variat...
This paper investigates whether there has been a fundamental change in the importance of economic co...
The large declines in total fertility rates that have occurred in many low income countries since 19...
This article presents a model of household fertility and child-rearing choice in which rising female...
The transition to market-oriented economies in Central and Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Unio...
We examine how far fertility trends respond to family policies in OECD countries. In the light of th...
A fundamental reversal of the traditional fertility-development relationship has occurred in highly ...
The 1970s worries of the "population bomb" were replaced in the 1990s with concerns of population ag...