差异化生育率、人力资本与发展

Differential Fertility, Human Capital, and Development

Review of Economic Studies · 2015
被引 95
人大 A+FT50ABS 4*

中文导读

利用48个发展中国家的微观数据,研究人口转型过程中生育率和子女投资的横截面模式变化,发现生育率差异对下一代平均教育的影响从正面转为负面。

Abstract

Using micro-data from 48 developing countries, this article studies changes in cross-sectional patterns of fertility and child investment over the demographic transition. Before 1960, children from larger families obtained more education, in large part because they had richer and more educated parents. By century's end, these patterns had reversed. Consequently, fertility differentials by income and education historically raised the average education of the next generation, but they now reduce it. Relative to the level of average education, the positive effect of differential fertility in the past exceeded its negative effect in the present. While the reversal of differential fertility is unrelated to changes in GDP per capita, women's work, sectoral composition, or health, roughly half is attributable to rising aggregate education in the parents' generation. The data are consistent with a model in which fertility has a hump-shaped relationship with parental skill, due to a corner solution in which low-skill parents forgo investment in their children. As the returns to child investment rise, the peak of the relationship shifts to the left, reversing the associations under study.

生育率差异人力资本人口转变子女教育投资