Economic Analyses of Rapid Population Growth
Nancy Birdsall
The World Bank Research Observer, 1989, vol. 4, issue 1, 23-50
Abstract:
Discussion of the macroeconomic consequences of rapid population growth is organized into three schools: pessimists, optimists, and the recent revisionists. For the revisionists, differing views are presented about the pervasiveness and relevance of market failures, such as the negative externalities of childbearing, and about the ability of families and institutions to adjust rapidly to changes brought on by rapid population growth. A welfare economics approach is used to review the merits of various public policies to reduce fertility, including public financing of family planning services and taxes and incentives associated with childbearing. Copyright 1989 by Oxford University Press.
Date: 1989
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