2010
DOI: 10.1142/s0217590810003894
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Status, Fertility, Growth and the Great Transition

Abstract: We develop an overlapping generation model to examine how the relationship between status concerns, fertility and education affect growth performances. Results are threefold. First, we show that stronger status motives heighten the desire of parents to have fewer but better educated children, which may foster economic development. Second, government should sometimes postpone the introduction of an economic policy in order to maintain the process of economic development, although such a policy aims to implement… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…5 These results are close to those derived by Tournemaine and Tsoukis (2010) who develop a similar setup to ours. However, the authors mainly focus on socio-macroeconomic issues, namely the potential impact of social status on the quality-quantity trade-off on children, thereby its potential effect on economic development.…”
supporting
confidence: 87%
“…5 These results are close to those derived by Tournemaine and Tsoukis (2010) who develop a similar setup to ours. However, the authors mainly focus on socio-macroeconomic issues, namely the potential impact of social status on the quality-quantity trade-off on children, thereby its potential effect on economic development.…”
supporting
confidence: 87%
“…Tournemaine and Tsoukis (2010) identified the relationship among socioeconomic status, fertility and economic growth theoretically. As for the empirical analysis, Hashmi and Mok (2013) analyzed age at marriage, household income and number of children as determinants of fertility in Singapore.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%