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Socio-economic and Demographic Factors associated with Fertility – Southeast and East Asian Evidence

Chen, Sofia LU and He, Ruoshui LU (2022) NEKP01 20221
Department of Economics
Abstract
Over the last three decades, Southeast and East Asian countries have experienced a substantial fertility decline. The socio-economic and demographic determinants appear to be important in explaining the fertility transition experienced in the region. Applying a fixed-effects estimation technique on the 1990-2019 panel data, this study found that increased women’s empowerment (include female education, labour force participation and wage), access to contraceptive usage, decreased infant mortality and improved living standards have a significant negative impact on childbirth rates. Female employment is the most influential factor. In addition, this paper sheds light on the government effectiveness of government policy and to what extent... (More)
Over the last three decades, Southeast and East Asian countries have experienced a substantial fertility decline. The socio-economic and demographic determinants appear to be important in explaining the fertility transition experienced in the region. Applying a fixed-effects estimation technique on the 1990-2019 panel data, this study found that increased women’s empowerment (include female education, labour force participation and wage), access to contraceptive usage, decreased infant mortality and improved living standards have a significant negative impact on childbirth rates. Female employment is the most influential factor. In addition, this paper sheds light on the government effectiveness of government policy and to what extent fertility behaviour can be affected by government intervention, by studying reforms to China’s one-child policy. We utilize a regression discontinuity design and our results provide strong evidence of that government policy successfully impacted fertility rates in most provinces of China. Future research should further investigate the rates of change in fertility among different countries and contributing factors to the level of births. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
Chen, Sofia LU and He, Ruoshui LU
supervisor
organization
course
NEKP01 20221
year
type
H2 - Master's Degree (Two Years)
subject
keywords
Fertility rates, Socio-economic and demographic determinants, Southeast and East Asia, Two-child policy, Fixed-effects
language
English
id
9082127
date added to LUP
2022-10-10 11:20:40
date last changed
2022-10-10 11:20:40
@misc{9082127,
  abstract     = {{Over the last three decades, Southeast and East Asian countries have experienced a substantial fertility decline. The socio-economic and demographic determinants appear to be important in explaining the fertility transition experienced in the region. Applying a fixed-effects estimation technique on the 1990-2019 panel data, this study found that increased women’s empowerment (include female education, labour force participation and wage), access to contraceptive usage, decreased infant mortality and improved living standards have a significant negative impact on childbirth rates. Female employment is the most influential factor. In addition, this paper sheds light on the government effectiveness of government policy and to what extent fertility behaviour can be affected by government intervention, by studying reforms to China’s one-child policy. We utilize a regression discontinuity design and our results provide strong evidence of that government policy successfully impacted fertility rates in most provinces of China. Future research should further investigate the rates of change in fertility among different countries and contributing factors to the level of births.}},
  author       = {{Chen, Sofia and He, Ruoshui}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  note         = {{Student Paper}},
  title        = {{Socio-economic and Demographic Factors associated with Fertility – Southeast and East Asian Evidence}},
  year         = {{2022}},
}