This paper investigates the effect of the differential pecuniary costs of sons and daughters on fertility decisions. The focus is on dowries in India, which increase the economic returns to sons and decrease the returns to daughters. The paper exploits an exogenous shift in the cost of girls relative to boys arising from a revision in anti-dowry law, which is shown to have decreased dowry transfers markedly. The reform is found to have attenuated the widely documented positive association between daughters and their parents’ fertility. The effect is particularly pronounced for more autonomous women and for individuals living in areas characterised by strong preferences for son
Sex ratios at birth have risen steadily over the last three decades across much of the developing wo...
Discrimination against girls is a social burden in India, which is enforced by the dowry system. Re...
Abstract: Large male-female disparities in human capital outcomes are found in many developing count...
We investigate whether legislation of equal inheritance rights for women modifies the historic prefe...
This paper introduces a new primary dataset on dowry payments in rural India. A novel feature of the...
In recent decades, several countries have experienced a rapid increase in their sex ratios at birth....
We provide evidence that dowry costs motivate son-preferring behaviors in India. Since gold is an in...
Boys and girls in India experience large dierences in survival and health outcomes. For example, the...
A deeply-rooted preference for sons may decrease the relative number of female births. Though there ...
This paper examines the impact of gender-progressive reforms to the inheritance law in India on wome...
We model the consequences of parental control over choice of wives for sons, for parental incentives...
This paper explores the linkages between dowry payments and educational attainment of women. It for...
We investigate the impact of son preferences in India on gender inequalities in education. We distin...
Fertility decline in developing countries may have unexpected demographic consequences. Although low...
Throughout history, marriage has often been accompanied by substantial exchange of wealth. The pract...
Sex ratios at birth have risen steadily over the last three decades across much of the developing wo...
Discrimination against girls is a social burden in India, which is enforced by the dowry system. Re...
Abstract: Large male-female disparities in human capital outcomes are found in many developing count...
We investigate whether legislation of equal inheritance rights for women modifies the historic prefe...
This paper introduces a new primary dataset on dowry payments in rural India. A novel feature of the...
In recent decades, several countries have experienced a rapid increase in their sex ratios at birth....
We provide evidence that dowry costs motivate son-preferring behaviors in India. Since gold is an in...
Boys and girls in India experience large dierences in survival and health outcomes. For example, the...
A deeply-rooted preference for sons may decrease the relative number of female births. Though there ...
This paper examines the impact of gender-progressive reforms to the inheritance law in India on wome...
We model the consequences of parental control over choice of wives for sons, for parental incentives...
This paper explores the linkages between dowry payments and educational attainment of women. It for...
We investigate the impact of son preferences in India on gender inequalities in education. We distin...
Fertility decline in developing countries may have unexpected demographic consequences. Although low...
Throughout history, marriage has often been accompanied by substantial exchange of wealth. The pract...
Sex ratios at birth have risen steadily over the last three decades across much of the developing wo...
Discrimination against girls is a social burden in India, which is enforced by the dowry system. Re...
Abstract: Large male-female disparities in human capital outcomes are found in many developing count...