From Malthus to modern growth: child labor, schooling and human capital
Inhalt
This paper develops a dynamic general equilibrium model of fertility, human capital accumulation,
child labor and uncertain child survival focusing on the qualitative and quantitative effect of declining
mortality on household decisions and economic development. Due to uncertainty about child survival,
parents have a precautionary demand for children. Rising survival probability leads to falling fertility,
eventually to investment into schooling and the demise of child labor. Child labor can be an obstacle
to development since it lowers the incentives of parents to educate children. Furthermore, the paper
argues that the decline of precautionary child demand as a consequence of falling mortality is not
sufficient to generate a demographic transition. Falling mortality can only explain a relatively small
part of the fertility decline. A sizable reduction in fertility can only be achieved by human capital
investment and the induced quantity-quality trade off.
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