Uncovering the myth of fertility : job-skills mismatch and fertility decisions
Central to the analysis in this paper is the following question asked – “How does job-skills mismatch affect individuals’ fertility decisions?” This paper presents an investigation of that relationship through the empirical analysis of United States (U.S.) population census data, and the testing of...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-625082019-12-10T14:31:39Z Uncovering the myth of fertility : job-skills mismatch and fertility decisions Tsang, Wei Yi Teo, Cheryl Hui Xin Lim, Damien Wai Kit Tang Yang School of Humanities and Social Sciences DRNTU::Social sciences::Economic theory Central to the analysis in this paper is the following question asked – “How does job-skills mismatch affect individuals’ fertility decisions?” This paper presents an investigation of that relationship through the empirical analysis of United States (U.S.) population census data, and the testing of a theoretical fertility model. The paper is arranged as such; the first part examines the determinants of fertility and the job-skills mismatch variable. Using the Poisson regression model, we measure their impacts on a woman’s fertility decision. The second part develops a theoretical fertility model which considers the interaction between job-skills mismatch and fertility choice. One of the most important findings of this paper is the effect of job-skills mismatch on fertility where it was observed that fertility rate declines as the degree of job-skills mismatch in the economy increases. Interestingly, the results from the numerical simulation suggest that whether job-skills mismatch increase or decrease total fertility rate in the economy largely depends on the elasticity of substitution between consumption and number of children. Connecting our empirical findings to the theoretical predictions; the negative relationship found between job-skills mismatch and number of children in the U.S. labor market therefore reflects the complementary nature of consumption and children in this country. Results of our empirical analyses have also confirmed that both income and education exhibit negative relationships with fertility rate, in line with existing literature. Bachelor of Arts 2015-04-14T03:40:23Z 2015-04-14T03:40:23Z 2015 2015 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/62508 en Nanyang Technological University 50 p. application/pdf |
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DRNTU::Social sciences::Economic theory Tsang, Wei Yi Teo, Cheryl Hui Xin Lim, Damien Wai Kit Uncovering the myth of fertility : job-skills mismatch and fertility decisions |
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Central to the analysis in this paper is the following question asked – “How does job-skills mismatch affect individuals’ fertility decisions?” This paper presents an investigation of that relationship through the empirical analysis of United States (U.S.) population census data, and the testing of a theoretical fertility model. The paper is arranged as such; the first part examines the determinants of fertility and the job-skills mismatch variable. Using the Poisson regression model, we measure their impacts on a woman’s fertility decision. The second part develops a theoretical fertility model which considers the interaction between job-skills mismatch and fertility choice. One of the most important findings of this paper is the effect of job-skills mismatch on fertility where it was observed that fertility rate declines as the degree of job-skills mismatch in the economy increases. Interestingly, the results from the numerical simulation suggest that whether job-skills mismatch increase or decrease total fertility rate in the economy largely depends on the elasticity of substitution between consumption and number of children. Connecting our empirical findings to the theoretical predictions; the negative relationship found between job-skills mismatch and number of children in the U.S. labor market therefore reflects the complementary nature of consumption and children in this country. Results of our empirical analyses have also confirmed that both income and education exhibit negative relationships with fertility rate, in line with existing literature. |
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Tang Yang |
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Tang Yang Tsang, Wei Yi Teo, Cheryl Hui Xin Lim, Damien Wai Kit |
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Final Year Project |
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Tsang, Wei Yi Teo, Cheryl Hui Xin Lim, Damien Wai Kit |
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Tsang, Wei Yi |
title |
Uncovering the myth of fertility : job-skills mismatch and fertility decisions |
title_short |
Uncovering the myth of fertility : job-skills mismatch and fertility decisions |
title_full |
Uncovering the myth of fertility : job-skills mismatch and fertility decisions |
title_fullStr |
Uncovering the myth of fertility : job-skills mismatch and fertility decisions |
title_full_unstemmed |
Uncovering the myth of fertility : job-skills mismatch and fertility decisions |
title_sort |
uncovering the myth of fertility : job-skills mismatch and fertility decisions |
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2015 |
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http://hdl.handle.net/10356/62508 |
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1681040330009346048 |