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Fertility, Education, Growth, and Sustainability

This book outlines key parallels between demographic development and economic outcomes, explaining how fertility, growth and inequality are related.

David de la Croix (Author)

9781107443051, Cambridge University Press

Paperback / softback, published 11 September 2014

266 pages, 45 b/w illus.
23 x 15.3 x 1.4 cm, 0.4 kg

'… presents parallels between demographic development and economic outcomes, explaining how fertility, growth, and inequality are related.' Journal of Economic Literature

Fertility choices depend not only on the surrounding culture but also on economic incentives, which have important consequences for inequality, education and sustainability. This book outlines parallels between demographic development and economic outcomes, explaining how fertility, growth and inequality are related. It provides a set of general equilibrium models where households choose their number of children, analysed in four domains. First, inequality is particularly damaging for growth as human capital is kept low by the mass of grown-up children stemming from poor families. Second, the cost of education can be an important determining factor on fertility. Third, fertility is sometimes viewed as a strategic variable in the power struggle between different cultural, ethnic and religious groups. Finally, fertility might be affected by policies targeted at other objectives. Incorporating new findings with the discussion of education policy and sustainability, this book is a significant addition to the literature on growth.

Introduction
Part I. Differential Fertility: 1. Benchmark model
2. Implications for the growth-inequality relationship
3. Understanding the forerunners in fertility decline
Part II. Education Policy: 4. Education policy: private versus public schools
5. Education politics and democracy
6. Empirical evidence
Part III. Sustainability: 7. Environmental collapse and population dynamics
8. Production, reproduction, and pollution caps
9. Population policy
10. Conclusion: endogenous fertility matters.

Subject Areas: Development economics & emerging economies [KCM], Economic growth [KCG]

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