For several centuries, women’s age at first marriage in Western Europe was higher than in the east (and in the rest of the world). Over the same period Western Europe began slow but sustained economic development relative to elsewhere. A model based on the economics of the household explains this association in two related ways. Both connect mortality, and the exercise of fertility restraint through higher marriage age, with greater human capital accumulation. The first explanation is simply an association but the second proposes a causal link where higher age of motherhood reduced the cost of investment in children. Evidence is provided that the causal process was operative in later nineteenth century Europ
Cliometrics confirms that Malthus’s model of the preindustrial economy is a good description for muc...
This paper reconsiders the fertility of historical social groups by accounting for singleness and ch...
In explaining England's early industrial development, previous research has highlighted that wealthy...
For several centuries, women’s age at first marriage in Western Europe was higher than in the east (...
For several centuries, women's age at first marriage in Western Europe was higher than in the east (...
Was the European Marriage Pattern an important contributor to England’s precocious economic developm...
For several centuries, women’s age at first marriage in western Europe was higher than in the east b...
This article scrutinizes the recently postulated link between the European Marriage Pattern (EMP) a...
In this paper, I address the U-shaped dynamics (a decrease followed by an increase) in the age at fi...
Cliometrics confirms that Malthus’ model of the pre-industrial economy, in which increases in produc...
We construct a Dynamic Stochastic General Equilibrium model of the interaction between demography an...
Europeans restricted their fertility long before the Demographic Transition. By raising the marriage...
This article scrutinizes the recently postulated link between the European Marriage Pattern (EMP) an...
Our article on ‘Late marriage as a contributor to the industrial revolution in England’ is intended ...
Cliometrics confirms that Malthus’s model of the preindustrial economy is a good description for muc...
This paper reconsiders the fertility of historical social groups by accounting for singleness and ch...
In explaining England's early industrial development, previous research has highlighted that wealthy...
For several centuries, women’s age at first marriage in Western Europe was higher than in the east (...
For several centuries, women's age at first marriage in Western Europe was higher than in the east (...
Was the European Marriage Pattern an important contributor to England’s precocious economic developm...
For several centuries, women’s age at first marriage in western Europe was higher than in the east b...
This article scrutinizes the recently postulated link between the European Marriage Pattern (EMP) a...
In this paper, I address the U-shaped dynamics (a decrease followed by an increase) in the age at fi...
Cliometrics confirms that Malthus’ model of the pre-industrial economy, in which increases in produc...
We construct a Dynamic Stochastic General Equilibrium model of the interaction between demography an...
Europeans restricted their fertility long before the Demographic Transition. By raising the marriage...
This article scrutinizes the recently postulated link between the European Marriage Pattern (EMP) an...
Our article on ‘Late marriage as a contributor to the industrial revolution in England’ is intended ...
Cliometrics confirms that Malthus’s model of the preindustrial economy is a good description for muc...
This paper reconsiders the fertility of historical social groups by accounting for singleness and ch...
In explaining England's early industrial development, previous research has highlighted that wealthy...