Essays on economics of microcredit and economics of fertility

2014 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Nguyen Doan

[ACCESS RESTRICTED TO THE UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI AT AUTHOR'S REQUEST.] This dissertation is a combination of three essays on development economics. In essay 1, I examine the impact of microcredit use on several aspects of households in Vietnam. One of the main findings is that access to microcredit makes people feel more optimistic. To deal with the possible endogeneity of microcredit availability, I use fixed effect models and also consider an instrumental variables approach. This framework provides controls for both unobserved and observed attributes of households. I do not find clear evidence that microcredit use has significant impact on household profits and expenditures on healthcare, education, food, or assets. The difference between how households respond to permanent income and oneshot income can be used to explain Vietnamese households' consumption behaviors. Because microcredit loans are uncertain incomes, households may hesitate to spend them right away. This could be a reason why we do not see clear evidence of microcredit effects on household consumption behaviors. Essays 2 and 3 focus on economics of fertility. In particular, in essay 2, I evaluate the children quantity/quality trade-off model. Finding exogenous variations in the quantity of children is the key in empirical studies on the quantity-quality trade-off. Prior to 2003, the Vietnamese government restricted the number of children per family to two and the policy was binding on government workers. Using the Vietnam Household Living Standard Survey data, I find that after the relaxation of the two-child policy in 2003, government workers are more likely to have more than two children compared to the general population. In particular, the policy increases the percentage of families that have more than two children by 8 percent. I use this exogenous increase in the quantity of children to build an instrument for fertility to test the Becker model. My findings are an increase in the number of children reduces the school enrollment of first-born children, but increases the education spending on a first-born child who is enrolled. In essay 3, I examine the causal link from family size to labor force participation of members in families, including mothers, fathers, and the first-born children. The research design exploits variation in fertility due to preferences for male children. Adopting the instrument for fertility introduced by Angrist et al. (1998, 2010), we find that the preference for a mixed sibling-sex composition Angrist et al. described in their papers does not exist in Vietnam. Having two first girls is more likely to push couples to try for more in hope of having a boy, but having two first boys can be enough for them. Empirical results show members in families respond differently to an increase in family size, and the results are also very different for urban and rural households. Children in rural areas suffer the most from high fertility. An additional child makes more rural parents get involved in self-employment to find a way to support their families. Negative effects of fertility on parental working hours are found in samples of urban mothers and rural fathers.

2006 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
pp. 9-35 ◽  
Author(s):  
ZHONGWEI ZHAO

Thanks to the progress that has been made in the study of population history, it has been gradually accepted that fertility in historical China was only moderate in comparison with the recorded high fertility. However, scholars still disagree on whether the Chinese could have intentionally controlled their family size. This article first summarizes recent findings about fertility patterns in historical China. Then the author provides further evidence of people limiting their family size in the past, before discussing the impact of traditional beliefs on people's fertility behaviour and summarizing the antinatalist ideas and suggestions put forwarded by Chinese officials and intellectuals over China's long history. This evidence is then used to comment on a number of suggestions that have been made about China's traditional reproductive behaviour and culture. The article challenges the views that people's reproductive strategies aimed in the past to maximize the number of surviving offspring and that the demand for children (or sons) was always high in historical China.


Author(s):  
Nancy Qian

A large economics literature provides evidence that parents trade-off the quantity of children with the quality of children, which implies that child ‘quality’ declines as family size increases. Child psychologists argue that increases in the number of children can increase the child quality because it provides children with opportunities to teach and learn from each other. Alternatively, there may simply be economies of scale in childcare costs for items such as clothes and textbooks such that an additional child lowers the marginal cost of quality for all children. Both China and India have experimented with different family planning policies to limit family size. This study addresses the effect of family size by examining the impact of increasing the number of children from one to two on school enrolment in rural China. To establish causality, the author exploits region and birth year variation in relaxations of the one child policy.


2019 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 48-67
Author(s):  
Heri Sunaryanto

The aim of this study was to analyze the impact of high fertility on the fulfillment of basic needs in Central Bengkulu Regency. This research is quantitative descriptive with the number of respondents was 50 people. The analytical method used was SPSS (Statistic Program for Sosial Sciences) with cross tabulation analysis and triangulation. The results showed that there was no relationship between the number of children and the fulfillment of basic needs such as education, fulfillment of food, shelter and health. There are several reasons of the explanation of the social reality. Furthermore, from the people perspective high fertility level is more linked to social values of children than of the calculation based on the fulfillment of basic needs.Keywords: Impact Fertility, Education, Housing, Food and Health.


1994 ◽  
Vol 26 (4) ◽  
pp. 553-558 ◽  
Author(s):  
Donald J. Adamchak ◽  
Michael T. Mbizvo

SummaryThis paper assesses the impact of husband's and wife's education and occupation on family size in Zimbabwe. Results from the 1988 Male Fertility Survey indicate that husband's education had a strong negative effect, and wife's education had a moderate negative effect on the number of children ever born. Contrary to the literature, wives who were not employed had significantly fewer children than those who work in agriculture, and fewer, but not significantly, than those in non-agricultural occupations. Findings show the importance of husband's education and the changing dynamics of wife's occupation in fertility decline.


2004 ◽  
Vol 36 (6) ◽  
pp. 663-682 ◽  
Author(s):  
NASRA M. SHAH ◽  
CONSTANCE A. NATHANSON

Kuwait is a high fertility country where the average number of desired children still exceeds 5. However, fertility behaviour is beginning to show a noticeable change and the current TFR is about 4·2 children. In order to understand the decline in fertility, the impact of perceived benefits and costs of children on Kuwaiti women’s desired and achieved fertility is analysed. Data from a nationally representative survey of Kuwaiti households held in 1999 are used. Bivariate analyses show that the mean desired number of children is significantly higher among those who rank higher on the perceived value of children, and lower among those who are concerned about the cost of raising children. Achieved fertility (children ever born) shows a similar pattern. In the multivariate analysis, however, large family values emerge as the only significant predictor of (higher) desired as well as achieved fertility, net of the respondent’s demographic and socioeconomic characteristics. The sociocultural, economic and political contexts that shape the mother’s perceptions of the benefits and costs of children are analysed and it is concluded that the need for children as social and national capital is currently the most important driving force behind fertility desires and behaviour.


2012 ◽  
pp. 22-46
Author(s):  
Huong Nguyen Thi Lan ◽  
Toan Pham Ngoc

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the impact of public expenditure cuts on employment and income to support policies for the development of the labor mar- ket. Impact evaluation is of interest for policy makers as well as researchers. This paper presents a method – that is based on a Computable General Equilibrium model – to analyse the impact of the public expenditure cuts policy on employment and income in industries and occupations in Vietnam using macro data, the Input output table, 2006, 2008 and the 2010 Vietnam Household Living Standard Survey.


Author(s):  
Julie Vinck ◽  
Wim Van Lancker

Belgium has been plagued by comparatively high levels of child poverty, and by a creeping, yet significant, increase that started in the good years before the crisis. This is related to the relatively high share of jobless households, the extremely high and increasing poverty risk of children growing up in these households, and benefits that are inadequate to shield jobless families with children from poverty. Although the impact of the Great Recession was limited in Belgium, the crisis seems to have had an impact on child poverty, by increasing the number of children living in work-poor households. Although the Belgian welfare state had an important cushioning impact, its poverty-reducing capacity was less strong than it used to be. The most important lesson from the crisis is that in order to make further headway in reducing child poverty, not only activation but also social protection should be improved.


Urban Studies ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 004209802199178
Author(s):  
Nan Liu

In housing markets there is a trade-off between selling time and selling price, with pricing strategy being the balancing act between the two. Motivated by the Home Report scheme in Scotland, this paper investigates the role of information symmetry played in such a trade-off. Empirically, this study tests if sellers’ pricing strategy changes when more information becomes available and whether this, in turn, affects the trade-off between the selling price and selling time. Using housing transaction data of North-East Scotland between 1998Q2 and 2018Q2, the findings show that asking price has converged to the predicted price of the property since the introduction of the Home Report. While information transparency reduces the effect of ‘overpricing’ on selling time, there is little evidence to show that it reduces the impact of pricing strategy on the final selling price in the sealed-bid context.


Author(s):  
Mouctar Sow ◽  
Myriam De Spiegelaere ◽  
Marie-France Raynault

Variations in social policy between countries provide opportunities to assess the impact of these policies on health inequities. This study compares the risk of low birth weight in Brussels and Montreal, according to household composition, and discusses the impact of income support policies. For each context, we estimated the impact of income support policies on the extent of poverty of welfare recipients, using the model family method. Based on the differences found, we tested hypotheses on the association between low birth weight and household composition, using administrative data from the birth register and social security in each region. The extent of poverty of welfare families differs according to household composition. In Quebec, the combination of low welfare benefits and larger family allowances widens the gap between households with children and those without children. The risk of LBW also differs between these two contexts according to the number of children. Compared to children born into large welfare families, first-born children are more at risk in Montreal than in Brussels. In addition to the usual comparative studies on the topic, our study highlights the importance of an evaluative perspective that considers the combination of different types of income support measures to better identify the most vulnerable households.


2021 ◽  
Vol 15 (2) ◽  
pp. 183-204
Author(s):  
Pankaj Sinha ◽  
Naina Grover

This study analyses the impact of competition on liquidity creation by banks and investigates the dynamics between diversification, liquidity creation and competition for banks operating in India during the period from 2005 to 2018. Using the broad and narrow measures of liquidity creation, an inverse relationship is determined between liquidity creation and competition. The study also indicates a trade-off between pro-competitive policies to improve consumer welfare and the liquidity-destroying effects of competition, and it highlights how diversification affects liquidity creation. Highly diversified banks in India create less liquidity compared with less-diversified banks, both public and private. The liquidity-destroying effects of competition is intensified among highly diversified private banks, which suggest that diversification has not moderated the adverse impact of competition. JEL Codes: G01, G18, G21, G28


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