Authors
Alma Cohen, Rajeev Dehejia, Dmitri Romanov
Publication date
2013/3/1
Journal
Review of Economics and Statistics
Volume
95
Issue
1
Pages
1-20
Publisher
The MIT Press
Description
Using panel data on over 300,000 Israeli women from 1999 to 2005, we exploit variation in Israel's child subsidy to identify the impact of changes in the price of a marginal child on fertility. We find a positive, statistically significant, and economically meaningful price effect on overall fertility and, consistent with Becker (1960) and Becker and Tomes (1976), a small effect of income on fertility, which is negative at low and positive at high income levels. We also find a price effect on fertility among older women, suggesting that part of the overall effect is due to a reduction in total fertility.
Total citations
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Scholar articles
A Cohen, R Dehejia, D Romanov - Review of Economics and Statistics, 2013