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The selectivity of fertility and the determinants of human capital investments : parametric and semiparametric estimates /

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Publication details: Washington, D.C. : World Bank, 1990.Description: c46 p : 1 illustrationISBN:
  • 082131629
Subject(s): LOC classification:
  • HB 1054.6. PIT
  • HD 6977 PIT
Online resources: Summary: In this paper the authors assess the importance of heterogeneity and selective fertility in altering estimates and interpretations of the determinants of the human capital of children. The authors set out a sequential model of human capital investments in children incorporating endogenous fertility and heterogeneity in human capital endowments to illustrate the fertility selection problem and issues of identification. Empirical results based on parametric and semiparametric estimates of selectivity models applied to data on birthweight and schooling in Malaysia indicate that the hypothesis of no fertility selection is strongly rejected, with mothers having higher birthweight children tending to have substantially lower birth probabilities (negative birth selectivity). As a consequence, the positive association between mother's schooling and birthweight is substantially underestimated and the positive effects of delaying childbearing overestimates when birth selectivity is not taken into account. The schooling results indicates strong rejection of the "efficient schooling" model, in which schooling is allocated efficiently across children, but only when the selectivity of fertility is taken into account.
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Book GIMPA Main Reference Section HB 1054.6. PIT (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available GIMPA31015

In this paper the authors assess the importance of heterogeneity and selective fertility in altering estimates and interpretations of the determinants of the human capital of children. The authors set out a sequential model of human capital investments in children incorporating endogenous fertility and heterogeneity in human capital endowments to illustrate the fertility selection problem and issues of identification. Empirical results based on parametric and semiparametric estimates of selectivity models applied to data on birthweight and schooling in Malaysia indicate that the hypothesis of no fertility selection is strongly rejected, with mothers having higher birthweight children tending to have substantially lower birth probabilities (negative birth selectivity). As a consequence, the positive association between mother's schooling and birthweight is substantially underestimated and the positive effects of delaying childbearing overestimates when birth selectivity is not taken into account. The schooling results indicates strong rejection of the "efficient schooling" model, in which schooling is allocated efficiently across children, but only when the selectivity of fertility is taken into account.

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