Volume 20 - Article 26 | Pages 623–656
Does fertility decrease household consumption?: An analysis of poverty dynamics and fertility in Indonesia
By Jungho Kim, Henriette Engelhardt, Alexia Prskawetz, Arnstein Aassve
References
Anand, S. and Harris, C. J. (1994). Choosing a welfare indicator. The American Economic Review 84(2): 226-231.
Angrist, J. and Evans, W. (1998). Children and their parents' labor supply: Evidence from exogenous variation in family size. The American Economic Review 88(3): 450-477.
Banks, J. and Johnson, P. (1994). Equivalence scale relativities revisited. Economic Journal 104(425): 883-890.
Becker, S. O. and Ichino, A. (2002). Estimation of average treatment effects based on propensity scores. The Stata Journal 2: 358-377.
Birdsall, N., Kelley, A. C., and Sinding, S. W. (2001). Population matters: Demographic change, economic growth, and poverty in the developing world. Oxford University Press.
Blundell, R. and Lewbel, A. (1991). The information content of equivalence scales. Journal of Econometrics 50: 49-68.
Browning, M. and Chiappori, P. A. (1998). Efficient intra-household allocations: A general characterization and empirical tests. Econometrica 66(6): 1241-1278.
Browning, M., Chiappori, P. A., and Lewbel, A. (2006). Estimating consumption economies of scale, adult equivalence scales, and household bargaining power. Oxford: University of Oxford.
Dawid, A. P. (1979). Conditional independence in statistical theory. Journal of the Royal Statistical Society Series B 41: 1-31.
De Santis, G. and Maltagliani, M. (2003). Equivalence scales: A fresh look at an old problem. Theory and empirical evidence.
Deaton, A. S. and Muellbauer, J. (1986). On measuring child costs: With applications to poor countries. Journal of Political Economy 94(4): 720-744.
Deaton, A. and Paxson, C. (1998). Economies of scale, household size, and the demand for food. Journal of Political Economy 106(5): 897-930.
Duflo, E. (2003). Grandmothers and granddaughters: Old-age pensions and intrahousehold allocation in South Africa. World Bank Economic Review 17(1): 1-25.
Frankenberg, E. and Karoly, L. (1995). The 1993 Indonesian family life survey: Overview and field report. Santa Monica: RAND.
Frankenberg, E., Smith, J. P., and Thomas, D. (2003). Economic shocks, wealth and welfare. Journal of Human Resources 38(2): 280-321.
Frankenberg, E. and Thomas, D. (2000). The Indonesia family life survey (IFLS): Study design and results from waves 1 and 2. Santa Monica: RAND.
Heckman, J. J. and Robb, R. (1985). Alternative methods for evaluating the impact of interventions: An overview. Journal of Econometrics 30(1): 239-267.
Heckman, J., Ichimura, H., and Todd, P. E. (1998). Matching as an econometric evaluation estimator. Review of Economic Studies 65: 261-294.
Koulovatianos, C., Schr\"oder, C., and Schmidt, U. (2005). On the income dependence of equivalence scales. Journal of Public Economics 89: 967-996.
Lanjouw, P. and Ravallion, M. (1995). Poverty and household size. Economic Journal 105(433): 1415-1434.
Lipton, M. (1998). Successes in anti poverty. Geneva: International Labor Organization.
Livi-Bacci, M. and De Santis, G. (1998). Population and poverty in developing world. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
Lundberg, S. J., Pollak, R. A., and Wales, T. J. (1997). Do husbands and wives pool their resources? Evidence from the United Kingdom child benefit. The Journal of Human Resources 32(3): 463-480.
Mason, A. and Lee, S. H. (2004). The demographic dividend and poverty reduction. Goals, New York, U.S.A.
Mattei, A. (2004). Estimating causal effects in experimental and observational studies suffering from missing data. [Ph.D thesis]. Firenze: Applied Statistics, Dipartimento di Statistica G. Parenti", Università degli Studidi Firenze.
McNicoll, G. (1997). Population and poverty: A review and restatement. New York: Population Council.
Merrick, T. (2001). Population and poverty in households: A review of reviews.
Moav, O. (2005). Cheap children and the persistence of poverty. The Economic Journal 115(500): 88-110.
Park, C. (2007). Marriage market, parents' bargaining powers, and children's nutrition and education. Oxford Bulletin of Economics and Statistics 69(6): 773-793.
Quisumbing, A. R. and Maluccio, J. A. (2003). Resources at marriage and intrahousehold allocation: Evidence from Bangladesh, Ethiopia, Indonesia, and South Africa. Oxford Bulletin of Economics and Statistics 65(3): 283-327.
Ravallion, M. (1996). Issues in measuring and modelling poverty. The Economic Journal 106(438): 1328-1343.
Rosenbaum, P. T. and Rubin, D. B. (1983). The central role of propensity score in observational studies. Biometrika 70: 41-55.
Rosenzweig, M. and Schultz, T. P. (1985). The demand for and supply of births: Fertility and its life cycle consequences. The American Economic Review 75(5): 992-1015.
Rosenzweig, M. and Wolpin, K. (2000). Natural "natural experiments" in economics. Journal of Economic Literature 38(4): 827-874.
Rosenzweig, M. and Wolpin, K. (1980). Testing the quantity-quality fertility model: The use of twins as a natural experiment. Econometrica 48(1): 227-240.
Schoumaker, B. and Tabutin, D. (1999). Relationship between poverty and fertility in Southern countries: Knowledge, methodology and cases. Louvain-la-Neuve: Università Catholique de Louvain.