Income and differential fertility: evidence from oil price shocks

This paper examines the effect of national income on the total fertility rate (children born per woman). We estimate the effects on fertility of shocks to national per capita income using plausibly exogenous variations in oil price shock as an instrument for income and using instrumental variable...

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Main Author: Hailemariam, Abebe
Format: Journal Article
Published: Cambridge University Press 2022
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/88446
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author Hailemariam, Abebe
author_facet Hailemariam, Abebe
author_sort Hailemariam, Abebe
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description This paper examines the effect of national income on the total fertility rate (children born per woman). We estimate the effects on fertility of shocks to national per capita income using plausibly exogenous variations in oil price shock as an instrument for income and using instrumental variable generalized quantile regressions (IV-GQR). Using data for a panel of 122 countries spanning the period 1965–2020, our results show that national per capita income has generally a negative and significant effect on the total fertility rate. Looking at the entire spectrum of the fertility distribution, the IV-GQR estimates exhibit considerable heterogeneity in the impact of income on fertility. The income elasticity of fertility is relatively low at the upper tail of the distribution (for countries with high fertility) compared to the value at the median.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-884462022-06-02T03:50:22Z Income and differential fertility: evidence from oil price shocks Hailemariam, Abebe This paper examines the effect of national income on the total fertility rate (children born per woman). We estimate the effects on fertility of shocks to national per capita income using plausibly exogenous variations in oil price shock as an instrument for income and using instrumental variable generalized quantile regressions (IV-GQR). Using data for a panel of 122 countries spanning the period 1965–2020, our results show that national per capita income has generally a negative and significant effect on the total fertility rate. Looking at the entire spectrum of the fertility distribution, the IV-GQR estimates exhibit considerable heterogeneity in the impact of income on fertility. The income elasticity of fertility is relatively low at the upper tail of the distribution (for countries with high fertility) compared to the value at the median. 2022 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/88446 10.1017/dem.2022.8 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Cambridge University Press fulltext
spellingShingle Hailemariam, Abebe
Income and differential fertility: evidence from oil price shocks
title Income and differential fertility: evidence from oil price shocks
title_full Income and differential fertility: evidence from oil price shocks
title_fullStr Income and differential fertility: evidence from oil price shocks
title_full_unstemmed Income and differential fertility: evidence from oil price shocks
title_short Income and differential fertility: evidence from oil price shocks
title_sort income and differential fertility: evidence from oil price shocks
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/88446