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Economics of Fertility. Chapter 5 Part I. Economics of Fertility. 1960s about 4 million births in the US Nearly 1 out of every 8 women gave birth between the ages of 15 and 44 Nearly 1 in 4 between the ages of 20 to 24 In 2000 there was about 4 million births in the US
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Economics of Fertility Chapter 5 Part I
Economics of Fertility • 1960s about 4 million births in the US • Nearly 1 out of every 8 women gave birth between the ages of 15 and 44 • Nearly 1 in 4 between the ages of 20 to 24 • In 2000 there was about 4 million births in the US • But only 1 our of every 16 in the 15 to 44
Economics of Fertility • Was introduced by Malthus to economics and his basic tenet was that • Population grows at a geometric rate, food production grew at an arithmetic rate Population Growth rate Food Time
Ways in Which to Deal With Population Explosion • Positive Checks • War • Famine • Pestilence • Preventive Checks • Moral Restraint • Contraception • Abortion
Fertility in Modern Economics • Once again, • Gary Becker • Demography • Study of population
Terms • Birth Rate • Number of births in a year (or given period) devided by the total population • In 2001, 4.03 million births • 285 million people
Birth Rate • Normally based on 1,000 people • Hence, birth rate for the U.S. in 2001 was • 14.1 per 1000 population • The per 1000 can be skipped since it is generally understood to be such
Natural Rate of Population • The natural rate of population is defined as: • Birth rate – Death Rate • Where death rate is constructed similar to birth rate
Birth Rate vs. Fertility Rate • Birth Rate is based on whole population • Fertility rate is based on at-risk population • Thus, fertility rate can be constructed based on women age 15 to 44.
Fertility Rate • In 2001 the fertility rate in the U.S. was 65.3 per 1000 • An approximation can be obtained by • Multiply by 2 the birth rate • 14.1 X 2 = 28.1 (account for about 50% being male) • 28.1 X 2.3 = 64.63 (for about little more than 50% of the population of female population being under 15 or older than 44
Fertility Rate • Age specific • Non-marital fertility rates • Sub groups: • By race • Ethnicity • etc
Total Fertility Rate • Total Fertility Rate (TFR) • TFR = 5 (FR10-14 + FR15-19 + FR20-24 +… + FR45-49) • In 2001 in the US the TFR was 2.034
Zero Population Growth • Zero Population Growth (ZPG) • ZPG is obtained when TFR = 2.13 • This is because 50% births are male • And some women either die or do not have children, hence TFR > 2 • In the US ZPG < 0
TERM DEFINITION AND FORMULA VALUE NUMBER OF BIRTHS - 4.03MILLIONS BIRTH RATE BIRTHS PER 1000 POP = (BIRTHS/POP) * 1000 14.1 FERTILITY RATE BIRTHS PER 1000 WOMEN, AGE 15-44 = (BIRTHS/NUM. OF WOMEN, AGE 15-44) * 1000 65.3 NONMARITAL FERTILITY RATE BIRTHS PER 1000 UNMARRIED WOMEN, AGE 15-44 = (BIRTHS TO UNMARRIED WOMEN/ NUM. UNMARRIED WOMEN, AGE 15-44) * 1000 43.8 TOTAL FERTILITY RATE NUMBER OF LIFETIME BIRTHS TO 1000 WOMEN IF THEY HAD CURRENT AGE-SPECIFIC FERTILITY RATES 2034 MEASURES OF US FERTILITY, 2001
5 4 3 2 200 150 100 50 FERTILITY RATE (LEFT SCALE) # BIRTHS (RIGHT SCALE) FERTILITY RATE (BIRTHS/1000 WOMEN) TOTAL BIRTHS (MILLIONS 1940 1960 1980 2000 Baby Boom vs. Baby BustUS FERTILITY RATE AND TOTAL BIRTHS, 1940-2001
1970 1995 AUSTIRA 2.3 1.4 FRANCE 2.5 1.7 GERMANY 2.0 1.3 ITALY 2.4 1.3 PORTUGAL 2.8 1.4 RUSSIAN FERDERATION 2.0 1.4 SWEDEN 1.9 1.7 UNITED KINGDOM 2.4 1.7 BIRTHS PER WOMAN, SELECTED EUROPEAN COUNTRIES, 1970 AND 1995
FertilityModern Economic Approach • Preferences • Demand for Child Services • Quantity • Quality U = U (CS, A) where A are all other goods
FertilityModern Economic Approach • Production • Child Services production function • CS = F(T,Z) • Where T is the Time involved and • Z the cost of purchasing things for them
FertilityModern Economic Approach • COST • Opportunity Cost • CCS = C( WM, WF, PZ ) • Changes in Costs • Δ PCS / Δ WM > 0 • Δ PCS / Δ WF > 0 • Δ PCS / Δ PZ > 0
FertilityModern Economic Approach • Price • PCS CCS = C( WM, WF, PZ ) • Full Income • YF = ( WM X T ) + ( WF X T) + V • DEMAND FOR CHILDREN • CS* = D (PCS, PA, YF, Preferences)
WAGECHANGE PRICE OF CHILD SERVICES FULL INCOME INCREASE INCREASES, TO THE EXTENT THAT THE INDIVIDUAL WITH THE HIGHER WAGE CONTRIBUTED TO PRODUCTION OF CHILD SERVICES INCREASES DECREASE DECRASES, TO THE EXTENT THAT THE INDIVIDUAL WITH THE LOWER WAGE CONTRIBUTED TO PRODUCTION OF CHILD SERVICES DECREASES THE IMPACT OF WAGES ON THE PRICE OF CHILD SERVICES AND FULL INCOME