<p>In recent years, population economics has become increasingly popular in both economic and policy analysis. For the inquiry into the long term development of an economy, the interaction between demographic change and economic activity cannot be neglected without omitting major aspects of the prob
Demographic Change and Long-Run Development
β Scribed by Matteo Cervellati; Uwe Sunde
- Publisher
- MIT Press
- Year
- 2017
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 367
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Recent approaches to economic demography, investigating the effect of the transition to low mortality and low fertility on economic development.Over the last two hundred years, mortality and fertility levels in the Western world have dropped to unprecedented levels. This demographic transition was accompanied by an economic transition that led to widespread education and economic growth after centuries of near-stagnation. At the same time, other changes have occurred in family structures, culture, and the organization of society. Economists have only recently begun to take into account the demographic transition from high mortality and high fertility when modeling and researching economic development. This CESifo volume reviews recent approaches to economic demography, considering such topics as the bio-geographic origins of comparative development differences, the role of health improvements and mortality decline, as well as physiological, familial, cultural, and social aspects.
After an overview of the study of demography and economic demography, the chapters cover subjects including the Neolithic era and the period of the formation of states and social institutions; longevity and economic growth; household decision making and fertility; land inequality, education, and marriage in nineteenth century Prussia; and caste systems and technology in pre-modern societies. The book concludes with a call for further investigation of the institutional and social factors that influence demographics and economies, suggesting that unified growth theory offers a potential approach to studying development.
Contributors
Matteo Cervellati, Francesco Cinnirella, David de la Croix, Carl-Johann Dalgaard, Matthias Doepke, Elena Esposito, Davide Fiaschi, Tamara Fioroni, Oded Galor, Boris Gershman, Erik Hornung, Fabian Kindermann, Nils-Petter LagerlοΏ½f, Holger Strulik, Uwe Sunde, David N. Weil
β¦ Table of Contents
Cover
Title Page, Copyright
Contents
Series Foreword
Overview
Preface
1 The Demographic Transition and Long-Term Development
2 The Long Shadow of History: The Biogeographical Origins of Comparative Economic Development
3 Health Improvement and Income Growth in the Long Run
4 Did Longer Lives Buy Economic Growth? From Malthus to Lucas and Ben-Porath
5 Adult Mortality and Modern Growth
6 Human Physiological Development and Economic Growth
7 Intrahousehold Decision Making and Fertility
8 Land Inequality, Education, and Marriage: Empirical Evidence from Nineteenth-Century Prussia
9 Long-Run Development and the New Cultural Economics
10 Time Since What? (Re)interpreting the Neolithic Transition in a Malthusian Environment
11 Caste Systems and Technology in Premodern Societies
12 Conclusion and Outlook
Contributors
Index
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
216 p.; 24cm
<p><p>Population ageing has been going on for many decades, but population shrinking is a rather new phenomenon. The population of Germany, as in many other countries, has passed a plateau and is currently shrinking. Demographic change is a challenge for infrastructure planning due to the longevity
4 volumes (8, 23, 2190 pages) ; 24 cm
7 volumes (8, 42, 3303 pages) ; 24 cm