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What has driven the great fertility decline in developing countries since 1960?

journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-19, 20:56 authored by Madsen, JB, Moslehi, S, Wang, C
Several developing countries are currently experiencing a significant fertility decline, however, academic economists have paid little attention to this transition. This paper seeks to explain the fertility transition by infant mortality, urbanisation, income, culture and educational attainment of females and males using annual data for 92 developing countries over the period 1960–2014. External instruments are used to deal with endogeneity. The results suggest that increasing per capita income, improved female education and increasing secularisation have been important determinants for declining fertility in the developing world.

History

Publication title

The Journal of Development Studies

Volume

54

Issue

4

Pagination

738-757

ISSN

0022-0388

Department/School

TSBE

Publisher

Frank Cass Co Ltd

Place of publication

Newbury House, 900 Eastern Ave, Newbury Park, Ilford, Essex, England, Ig2 7Hh

Rights statement

© 2017 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group

Repository Status

  • Restricted

Socio-economic Objectives

Economic growth

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