
handle: 10419/35626
Abstract Although the theoretical trade-off between the quantity and quality of children is well established, empirical evidence supporting such a causal relationship—particularly on child health—is limited. We use two measures of child health to assess the quantity-quality trade-off across the entire distribution. Using data from the Indonesia Family Life Survey and controlling for the potential endogeneity of child quantity, we find modest, statistically meaningful evidence of a causal trade-off.
Familienökonomik, Haushaltsökonomik, Indonesien, C14, human capital, D10, fertility, Bildungsinvestition, O12, ddc:330, I12, quantile treatment effects, Gesundheit, Kinder, health, stochastic dominance, intrahousehold allocation, health, human capital, fertility, quantile treatment effects, stochastic dominance, Intrahousehold allocation, Fruchtbarkeit, jel: jel:D10, jel: jel:C14, jel: jel:I12, jel: jel:O12
Familienökonomik, Haushaltsökonomik, Indonesien, C14, human capital, D10, fertility, Bildungsinvestition, O12, ddc:330, I12, quantile treatment effects, Gesundheit, Kinder, health, stochastic dominance, intrahousehold allocation, health, human capital, fertility, quantile treatment effects, stochastic dominance, Intrahousehold allocation, Fruchtbarkeit, jel: jel:D10, jel: jel:C14, jel: jel:I12, jel: jel:O12
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