Rosenzweig, Mark R., and Junsen Zhang, "Do Population Control Policies Induce More Human Capital Investment? Twins, Birth Weight and China's "One-Child" Policy," Review of Economic Studies 76.3 (2009): 1149-1174.Mark R. Rosenzweig & Junsen Zhang, 2006. " ...
In this paper, we examine the impact of family size on maternal health outcomes by exploiting the tremendous change in family size under the One-Child policy in China. Using data from the China Health and Nutrition Survey 1993–2006, we find that mothers with fewer children have a higher cal...
Onechildpolicy 第一篇:One child policy On China’s One-Child Policy During the period of Chairman Mao in China, with the economy development and the improvement of people’s living standard, infant mortality declined from 227/1000 births in 1949 to 53/1000 in 1981, and life expectancy dramat...
University of Applied Sciences Business Administration One-child policy in China Term paper Submitted within the study programme Bachelor of Science in...
Despite the evident significant trade-off between number of children and child quality in China, however, the findings suggest that the contribution of the one-child policy in China to the development of its human capital was modest. 展开 关键词: birthweight China family size schooling twins ...
In China during the 1970s, there was a campaign of “One child is good, two are okay, and three are too many.” This was the beginning of the One-Child Policy for people living in towns and cities. People have been able to save money because one child costs much less than two or...
China’s one-child policy (OCP) as an exogenous source of variation in family size. Using the percentage of current mothers of primary childbearing age who gave a higher order birth in 1981, we construct a quantitative indicator of the extent of local violation of the OCP, referred to as ...
In 1973, China started to promote birth control with the slogan, “Late, Long, Few” and introduced the one-child policy six years later. Forced abortion was the punishment to punish the ones who did not obey the policy and often, families chose to pay the local officials to “set them...
the one-child policy and gender equality in education in china evidence from household data 热度: Employment and Fertility in Rural China Implications for the One-Child Policy 热度: TheOne-ChildPolicyandHouseholdSavings ∗ TahaChoukhmane Yale ...
China's One‐Child Policy: Some Unintended Consequences This paper gives a brief overview of China's family planning policy which, although recently relaxed, still controls a large swath of the population. Unoff... D Howden,Y Zhou - 《Economic Affairs》 被引量: 13发表: 2014年 Children: Fin...