Title
Growth and Childbearing in the Short-and Long-Run
Author(s)
Tom Vogl Tom Vogl (Princeton University)
Shoumitro Chatterjee Shoumitro Chatterjee (Princeton University)
Abstract
Despite being key to theories of economic growth and the demographic transition, evidence on how fertility responds to aggregate income change is mixed. We analyze economic growth and fertility change in the developing world over six decades, using data on 2.3 million women from 255 surveys in 81 countries. We find that fertility responds differently to fluctuations and long-run growth, and the nature of these responses varies over the lifecycle. Fertility is procyclical, falling during recessions, but also declines with long-run growth. Lifetime fertility is affected by fluctuations near the end of the reproductive period but not those at prime reproductive age. Our results are consistent with models linking demography, human capital, and long-run growth, extended to include a lifecycle with liquidity constraints.
Creation Date
2016-12
Section URL ID
Paper Number
2016-12
URL
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0BwjFN4HbBrDBbGlTc18zVzdLQTg/view
File Function
Jel
E32. J13, O47
Keyword(s)
Suppress
false
Series
9