Population Policies, Fertility, Women’s Human Capital, and Child Quality
نویسنده
چکیده
Population policies are defined here as voluntary programs which help people control their fertility and expect to improve their lives. There are few studies of the long-run effects of policyinduced changes in fertility on the welfare of women, such as policies that subsidize the diffusion and use of best practice birth control technologies. Evaluation of the consequences of such family planning programs almost never assess their long-run consequences, such as on labor supply, savings, or investment in the human capital of children, although they occasionally estimate the short-run association with the adoption of contraception or age-specific fertility. The dearth of long-run family planning experiments has led economists to consider instrumental variables as a substitute for policy interventions which not only determine variation in fertility but are arguably independent of the reproductive preferences of parents or unobserved constraints that might influence family life cycle behaviors. Using these instrumental variables to estimate the effect of this exogenous variation in fertility on family outcomes, economists discover these “cross effects” of fertility on family welfare outcomes tend to be substantially smaller in absolute magnitude than the OLS estimates of partial correlations referred to in the literature as evidence of the beneficial social externalities associated with the policies that reduce fertility. The paper summarizes critically the empirical literature on fertility and development and proposes an agenda for research on the topic.
منابع مشابه
The Production of Child Human Capital: Endowments, Investments and Fertility
We study how endowments, investments and fertility interact to produce human capital in childhood. First we explore the human capital production function. Exploiting an exogenous source of investment, the launch of Head Start in 1966, to identify the impact of investments (preschool) on child human capital (IQ), we find strong evidence of complementarity between investments and early human capi...
متن کاملEffects of Birth Control Policies on Women’s Age at First Birth in China
The end of the “one-child” policy in China has brought the discussion of how much birth control policies have actually affected women’s childbearing behavior back into the spotlight. Some people suggest that birth control policies explain most of the fertility decline in China, but others believe that socioeconomic development has also played a decisive role. To shed light on these questions, i...
متن کاملWomen’s Role in the Agricultural Household: Bargaining and Human Capital
This paper reviews the methods and empirical findings from economic analyses of women’s contribution to social welfare and the determinants of their human capital. To understand better women’s roles in agricultural households, three themes have gained prominence in the economics literature. First is the conceptualization of the unified family as coordinator of production and consumption over th...
متن کاملFertility, Human Capital, and Economic Growth over the Demographic Transition
Do low fertility and population aging lead to economic decline if couples have fewer children, but invest more in each child? By addressing this question, this article extends previous work in which the authors show that population aging leads to an increased demand for wealth that can, under some conditions, lead to increased capital per worker and higher per capita consumption. This article i...
متن کاملOne-child Policy: A Macroeconomic Analysis
This paper studies the effects of a one-child policy. A benchmark without the fertility constraint is compared to a counterfactual experiment with the fertility constraint in place. The results suggest that imposing the one-child policy promotes the accumulation of human capital and increases output per capita. In partial equilibrium, an unskilled adult’s welfare is lowered by the policy. Howev...
متن کامل