Jnl of Population Economics
书刊 · 2013-07-21
返回2013, Volume 26, Issue 1
- 5-32 Opting for families: recent trends in the fertility of highly educated women
by Qingyan Shang & Bruce Weinberg - 33-65 Childcare costs and the demand for children—evidence from a nationwide reform
by Eva Mörk & Anna Sjögren & Helena Svaleryd - 67-85 Endogenous fertility in a growth model with public and private health expenditures
by Dimitrios Varvarigos & Intan Zakaria - 87-108 Economic incentives and the timing of births: evidence from the German parental benefit reform of 2007
by Michael Neugart & Henry Ohlsson - 109-145 The causal relationship between female labor supply and fertility in the USA: updated evidence via a time series multi-horizon approach
by Paraskevi Salamaliki & Ioannis Venetis & Nicholas Giannakopoulos - 147-180 The effect of fertility decisions on excess female mortality in India
by Daniel Rosenblum - 181-202 Endogenous fertility and human capital in a Schumpeterian growth model
by Angus Chu & Guido Cozzi & Chih-Hsing Liao - 203-238 Welfare reform and the subjective well-being of single mothers
by Chris Herbst - 239-261 Total work and gender: facts and possible explanations
by Michael Burda & Daniel Hamermesh & Philippe Weil - 263-283 Part-time jobs: what women want?
by Alison Booth & Jan Ours - 285-301 Effects of early maternal employment on maternal health and well-being
by Pinka Chatterji & Sara Markowitz & Jeanne Brooks-Gunn - 303-322 Gender patterns in Vietnam’s child mortality
by Thong Pham & Peter Kooreman & Ruud Koning & Doede Wiersma - 323-356 Does large volatility help?—stochastic population forecasting technology in explaining real estate price process
by Yuan Cheng & Xuehui Han - 357-378 Demographic change and the labour share of income
by Torsten Schmidt & Simeon Vosen