Journal of Population Economics
Berlin
Trimestrale
ISSN: 0933-1433
Conservata in: Università degli Studi di Firenze, Biblioteca di Scienze Sociali
Punto di servizio: Economia; Riv. str. 0599
Consistenza: n. 1, 1988 –
[ 2030-2021 ] [ 2020-2011 ] [ 2010-2001 ] [ 2000-1998 ]
Stephen P. Jenkins, 1998 President of the European Society
for Population Economics, p. 527
PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS
S. P. Jenkins, Modelling household income dynamics, p. 529
WELFARE ISSUES
L. M. Argys, S. L. Averett, D. I. Rees, Welfare generosity,
pregnancies and abortions among unmarried AFDC recipients, p. 569
R. Aaberge, U. Colombino, S. Strørn, Labor supply responses
and welfare effects from replacing current tax rules by a flat
tax: Empirical evidence from Italy, Norway and Sweden, p. 595
P. Osmundsen, G. Schjelderup, K. P. Hagen, Personal income
taxation under mobility, exogenous and endogenous welfare weights
and asymmetric information, p. 623
G. Marini, p. Scaramozzino, Social time preference, p. 639
Acknowledgement to editorial collaborators, p. 647
Fourteenth ESPE Conference and General Assembly in Bonn, 2000,
p. 649
Call for papers, p. 657
Contents of volume 13 (2000) I-IV
SOCIAL ISSUES
M. Bräuninger, J. P. Vidal, Private versus public financing
of education and endogenous growth, p. 387
D. de la Croix, p. Monfort, Education funding and regional
convergence, p. 403
D. Anderberg, Occupational risks, social insurance and investments
in education, p. 425
A. Kemnitz, Social security, public education, and growth
in a representative democracy, p. 443
SYMPOSIUM ON: “HUNGER AND MIGRATION”
edited by Timothy W. Guinnane and Christoph M. Schmidt
T. W. Guinnane, C. M. Schmidt, Editorial, p. 463
P. Groote, V. Tassenaar, Hunger and migration in a rural-traditional
area in the nineteenth century, p. 465
M. Vogler, R. Rotte, The effects of development on migration:
Theoretical issues and new empirical Evidence, p. 485
T. J. Hatton, How much did immigrant “quality” decline
in late nineteenth century America?, p. 509
FERTILITY STUDIES USING COUNT DATA METHODS
edited by Rainer Winkelmann and Klaus F. Zimmermann
R. Winkelmann, K. F. Zimmermann, Editorial, p. 171
J. M. C. Santos Silva, F. Covas, A modified hurdle model for
completed fertility, p. 173
M. Meikersson, D. O. Rooth, Modeling female fertility using
inflated count data models, p. 189
P- G. Moffatt, S. A. Peters, Grouped zero-inflated count data
models of coital frequency, p. 205
A. S. Kaiwij, The effects of female employment status on the
presence and number of children, p. 221
J. Mayer, R. T. Riphahn, Fertility assimilation of immigrants:
Evidence from count data models, p. 241
V. Atella, F. C. Rosati, Uncertainty about children’s survival
and fertility: A test using indian microdata, p. 263
GENDER DIFFERENCES IN TRANSITION TO MARKET ECONOMIES
edited by Thomas A. Mroz and Klaus F. Zimmermann
T. A. Mroz, K. F. Zimmermann, Editorial, p. 279
Orazem P. F., M. Vodopivec, Male-female differences in labor
market outcomes during the early transition to market. The cases
of Estonia and Slovenia, p. 283
B. Li. S. Gustafsson, Economic transformation and the gender
earnings gap in urban China, p. 305
P. W. Liu, X. Meng, J. Zhang, Sectoral gender wage differentials
and discrimination in the transitional Chinese economy, p. 331
E. Glinskaya, T. A. Mroz, The gender gap in wages in Russia
from 1992 to 1995, p. 353
Kuznets Prize for James R. Walker, p. 1
LABOR ISSUES
R. Ray, Analysis of child labour in Peru and Pakistan: A comparative
study, p. 3
Ø. A. Nilsen, A. E. Risa, A. Torstensen, Transitions
from employment among young Norwegian workers, p. 21
P. A. Puhani, Poland on the dole: The effect of reducing the
unemployment benefit entitlement period during transition, p. 35
J. Hansen, The effect of work absence on wages and wage gaps
in Sweden, p. 45
MIGRATION
Co. C. Y., I. N. Gang, M. S. Yun, Returns to returning, p. 57
S. A. Kossoudji, D. A. Cobb-Clark, IRCA’s impact on the occupational
concentration and mobility of newly-legalized Mexican men, p. 81
W. Suen, Estimating the effects of immigration in one city, p. 99
D. Gaumont, A. Mesnard, Altruism and international labour
migration, p. 113
Meier V., Time preference, international migration, and social
security, p, 127
INTERGENERATIONAL MODELS
H. Jürges, Of rotten? Kids and Rawlsian parents: The
optimal timing of intergenerational transfers, p. 147
E. R. Eide, M. H. Showalter, A note on the rate of intergenerational
convergence of earnings, p. 159
Thirteenth ESPE Conference and General Assembly in Torino,
1999, p. 163
F. Bourguignon. 1995 President of the European Society for
Population Economics, p. 501
PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS
F. Bourguignon, The cost of children: May the collective approach
to household behavior help?, p. 503
FAMILY ISSUES
J. Waldfogel, Y. Higuchi, M. Abe, Family leave policies and
women’s retention after childbirth: Evidence from the United
States, Britain, and Japan, p. 523
D. C. Ribar, The socioeconomic consequences of young women
‘s childbearing: Reconciling disparate evidence, p. 547
C. Lehr Scotese, Banking on fewer children: Financial intermediation,
fertility and economic development, p. 567
J. Tiefenthaler, The sectoral labor supply of married couples
in Brazil: Testing the unitary model of household behavior,
p. 591
SOCIAL SECURITY
R. A. Pecchenino, K. R. Utendorf, Social security, social
welfare and the aging population, p. 607
B. U. Wigger, Pay-as-you-go financed public pensions in a
model of endogeneous growth and fertility, p. 625
Acknowledgement to editorial collaborators, p. 641
Call for papers, p. 643
Call for proposals, p. 644
Contents of volume 12 (1999), I – IV
WELFARE
I. Preston, I. Walker, Welfare measurement in labour supply
models with nonlinear budget Constraints, p. 343
A. T. Riphahn, Income and employment effects of health shocks.
A test case far the German welfare state, p. 363
P. B. Levine, D. J. Zimmerman, An empirical analysis of the
welfare magnet debate using the NLSY, p. 391
J. Ekberg, Immigration and the public sector: Income effects
for the native population in Sweden, p. 411
DEMOGRAPHIC ISSUES
T. Lindh, B. Malmberg, Age structure effects and growth in
the OECD. 1950-1990, p. 431
J. McIntosh, An analysis of reproductive behaviour in Canada:
Results from an intertemporal optimizing model, p. 451
A. M. M. Masih, R, Masih, Is a significant socio-economic
structural change a pre-requisite for ‘initial’ fertility decline
in the LDCs? Evidence from Thailand based on a multivariate cointegration/vector
error correction modelling approach, p. 463
S. Bougheas, Y. Georgellis, The effect of divorce costs on
marriage formation and dissolution, p. 489
Call for papers, p. 499
Call for proposal, p. 500
YOUTH LABOR MARKET
edited by Klaus F. Zimmermann
K. F. Zimmermann, Editorial, p. 193
J. M. Orszag, D. Snower, Youth unemployment and government
policy, p. 197
D. J. Macunovich, The fortunes of one’s birth: Relative cohort
size and the youth labor market in the United States, p. 215
G. J. van den Berg, J. C. van Ours, Duration dependence and
heterogeneity in French youth unemployment durations, p. 273
P. Rice, The impact of local labour markets on investment
in further education: Evidence from the England and Wales youth
cohort studies, p. 287
A. Barrett, T. Callan, B. Nolan, Returns to education in the
Irish youth labour market, p. 313
R. Winter-Ebmer, J. Zweimüller, Do immigrants displace
young native workers: The Austrian experience, p. 327
Twelfth ESPE Conference and General Assembly in Amsterdam, 1998
(Corrigendum), p. 341
ILLEGAL MIGRATION
edited by L. Katseli, T. Straubhaar and K. F. Zimmermann
L. Katseli, T. Straubhaar, K. F. Zimmermann, Editorial, p. 1
G: S: Epstein, A. L. Hillman, A. Weiss, Creating illegal immigrants,
p. 3
P. Levine, The-welfare economics of immigration control, p. 23
S. Djajic, Dynamics of immigration control, p. 45
B. R. Chiswick, p. W. Miller, Language skills and earnings
among legalized aliens, p. 63
F. L. Rivera-Batiz, Undocumented workers in the labor market:
An analysis of the earnings of legal and illegal Mexican immigrants
in the United States, p. 91
I. N. Gang, R. C. Stuart, Mobility where mobility is illegal:
Internal migration and city growth in the Soviet Union, p. 117
A. Venturini, Do immigrants working illegally reduce the natives’
legal employment? Evidence- from Italy, p. 135
A. H. Sarris, S. Zografakis, A computable general equilibrium
assessment of the impact of illegal immigration on the Greek
economy, p. 155
SYMPOSIUM ON: “GENDER ISSUES IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES”
edited by Ira N. Gang and T. Paul Schultz
A. Deolalikar, E. Rose, Gender and savings in rural India, p. 453
A. Garg, J. Morduch, Sibling rivalry and the gender gap: Evidence
from child health outcomes in Ghana, p. 471
J. Haughton, O. Haughton, Are simple tests of son preference
useful? An evaluation using data from Vietnam, p. 495
DEMOGRAPHIC MODELING
K. Blackburn, G. P. Cipriani, Endogenous fertility, mortality
and growth, p. 517
G. Steinmann, A. Prskawetz, G. Feichtinger, A model on the
escape from the Malthusian trap, p. 535
A. Kalwij, R. Alessie, p. Fontein, Household commodity demand
and demographics in the Netherlands: A microeconometric analysis, p. 551
MIGRATION
F. Docquier, H. Rapoport, Are migrant minorities strategically
self-selected?, p. 579
J-P, Vidal, The effect of emigration on human capital formation, p. 589
Acknowledgement to editorial collaborators, p. 601
Call for papers, p. 603
Contents of volume 11 (1998)
T. Paul Schultz, 1997 President of the European Society for
Population Economics, p. 305
PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS
T. P. Schultz, Inequality in the distribution of personal
income in the world: How it is changing and why, p. 307
SOCIAL SECURITY
F. van Dijk, Private support and social security, p. 345
Ø. Thøgersen, A note on intergenerational risk
sharing and the design of pay-as-you-go pension programs, p. 373
MIGRATION
B. A. Portnov, The effect of housing on migrations in Israel:
1988-1994, p. 379
R. P. C. Brown, Comparative labor market performance of visaed
and non-visaed migrants: Pacific islanders in Sydney, p. 395
DEMOGRAPHIC CHANGE
R. E. Bailey, M. J. Chambers, The impact of real wage and
mortality fluctuations on fertility and nuptiality in precensus
England, p. 413
S. Al-Qudsi, The demand for children in Arab countries: Evidence
from panel and count data models, p. 435
Heather Joshi, 1996 President of the European Society for
Population Economics, p. 159
PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS
h. Joshi, The opportunity costs of childbearing: More than
mothers’ business, p. 161
FAMILY ISSUES
M. Lundholm, H. Ohlsson, Wages. Taxes and publicly provided
day care, p. 185
S. Boggess, Family structure, economic status, and educational
attainment, p. 205
G. Lacroix, M. Picot, C. Sofer, The extent of labour specialization
in the extended family: A theoretical and empirical analysis, p. 223
MIGRATION
T. P. Schultz, Immigrant quality and assimilation: A review
of the US literature, p. 239
B. R. Chiswick, Hebrew Language usage: Determinants and effects
on earnings among Immigrants in Israel, p. 253
J. T. Durkin Jr, Immigration, assimilation and growth, p. 273
J. E. Hayfron, The performance of immigrants in the Norwegian
labor market, p. 293
WELFARE
C. Blackorby, W. Bossert, D. Donaldson, Uncertainty and critical-level
population principles, p. 1
FERTILITY
A. Cigno, Fertility decisions-when infant survival is endogenous, p. 21
P. Merrigan P, Y. St. Pierre, An econometric and neoclassical
analysis of the timing and spacing of births in Canada from 1950
to 1990, p. 29
D. J. Macunovich, Fertility and the Easterlin hypothesis:
An assessment of the literature, p. 53
MIGRATION
R. Axelsson, O. Westerlund, A panel study of migration, self-selection
and household real income, p. 113
P. L. Siklos, W. L. Marr, The unemployment insurance compensation
experience of immigrants in Canada, 1980-1988, p. 127
B. Crettez, p. Michel, J. P. Vidal, Time preference and capital
mobility in an OLG model with land, p. 149
CHILD LABOR
D. A. Galbi, Child labor and the division of labor in the
early English cotton mills, p. 357
G. Psacharopoulos, Child labor versus educational attainment.
Some evidence from Latin America, p. 377
H. A. Patrinos, G. Psacharopoulos, Family size, schooling
and child labor in Peru. An empirical analysis, p. 387
P. Jensen, H. S. Nielsen, Child labour or school attendance?
Evidence from Zambia, p. 407
O. Dustmann, C. Rajan N., S. Smith, Teenage truancy, part-time
working and wages, p. 425
RETIREMENT
W. Suen, Retirement patterns in Hong Kong: A censored regression
analysis, p. 443
S. Siddiqui, The pension incentive to retire: Empirical evidence
for West Germany, p. 463
Acknowlegement to editorial collaborators, p. 487
Eleventh ESPE Conference and General Assembly in Colchester,
1997, p. 489
Contents of Volume 10 (1997)
WELFARE
J. L. Hotchkiss, M. M. Kassis, R. E. Moore, Running hard and
falling behind: A welfare analysis of two-earner families, p. 237
FERTILITY
H. Nguyen-Dinh, A socioeconomic analysis of the determinants
of fertility: The case of Vietnam, p. 251
W. Wang, F. Famoye, Modeling household fertility decisions
with generalized Poisson regression, p. 273
MODELLING WITH ENDOGENOUS POPULATION
H. Strulik, Learning-by-doing, population pressure, and the
theory of demographic transition, p. 285
M. B. Cronshaw, T. Requate, Population size and environmental
quality, p. 299
E. Canton, L. Meijdam, Altruism and the macroeconomic effects
of demographic changes, p. 317
M. Kolmar, Intergenerational redistribution in a small open
economy with endogenous fertility, p. 335
D. J. Macunovich, A conversation with Richard Easterlin,
p. 119
S. Harkness, S. Machin, J. Waldfogel, Evaluating the pin money
hypothesis: The relationship between women’s labour market activity,
family income and poverty in Britain, p. 137
TRAINING
R. Winkelmann, How young workers get their training: A survey
of Germany versus the United States, p. 159
D. Harhoff, T. J. Kane, Is the German apprenticeship system
a panacea for the U.S. labor market?, p. 171
W. Arulampalam, A.L. Booth, Who gets over the training hurdle?
A study of the training experiences of young men and women in
Britain, p. 197
J. R. Veum, Training and job mobility among young workers
in the United States, p. 219
C. Y. C. Chu, R. D. Lee, Famine revolte and the dynasfic cycle:
population dynamics in historic China (Corrigendum), p. 235
K. F. Zimmermann, Editorial: The second decade, p. 1
A. Sen, Population policy: Authoritarianism versus cooperation, p. 3
C. R. Arroyo, J. Zhang, Dynamic microeconomic models of fertility
choice: A survey, p. 23
J. B. Davies, J. Zhang, The effects of gender control on fertility
and children’s consumption, p. 67
R. Kollmann, Endogenous fertility in a model with non-dynastic
parental altruism, p. 87
C. K. Yip, J. Zhang, A simple endogenous growth model with endogenous
fertility: Indeterminancy and uniqueness, p. 97
Tenth ESPE Conference and General Assembly in Uppsala, 1996,
p. 111
A. C. Kelley, R. M. Schmidt, Saving; dependency and development, p. 365
B.Crettez. Ph. Michel, J.-P. Vidal, Time preference and labour
migration in an OLG model with land and capital, p. 387
H. Cremer, p. Pestieau, Bequests as a heir” discipline
device, p. 405
Th. Palivos, C. A. Scotese, Fertility, growth and the financing
of public education and health, p. 415
A. Kimhi, Demographic composition of farm households and its
effect on time allocation, p. 429
Acknowledgement to editorial collaborators, p. 441
Call for Papers, p. 442
Contents of Volume 9 (1996)
SYMPOSIUM ON: “LABOR FORCE TRANSITIONS OF WOMEN IN CONNECTION
WITH CHILDBIRTH”
edited by S. S. Gustafsson and J. E Ermisch
S. S. Gustafsson, J. F. Ermisch, Editorial, p. 221
S. S. Gustafsson. C. M. M. P. Wetzels, J. D. Vlasblom, S. Dex,
Women’s labor force transations in connection with childbirth:
A panel data comparison between Germany, Sweden and Great Britain, p. 223
J. Ondrich, C K. Spiess, Q. Yang, Barefoot and in a German
kitchen: Federal parental leave and benefit policy and the return
to work after childbirth in Germany, p. 247
M. Rönsen. M. Sundström, Maternal employment in
Scandinavia: A comparison of the after-birth employment activity
of Norwegian and Swedish women, p. 267
G. C. Giannelli, Women’s transitions in the labour market:
A competing risks analysis on German panel data, p. 287
P. Adam, Mothers in an insider-outsider economy: The puzzle
of Spain, p. 301
H. Joshi, S. Macran, S. Dex, Employment after childbearing
and women’s subsequent labour force partiapation: Evidence from
the British 1958 birth cohort, p. 325
B. Dankmeyer, Long run opportunity-costs of children according
to education of the mother in the Netherlands, p. 349
T. Bergstrom, R. F. Schoeni, Income prospects and age-at-marriage, p. 115
M. Staat. G. Wagenhals, Lone mothers: A review, p. 131
L. Meijdam, H. A. A. Verbon, Aging and political decision
making on public pensions, p. 141
A. Winkelmann, Unskilbed labor and wage determination: An
empirical investigation far Germany, p. 159
FERTILITY
E.L. Lehrer, Religion as a determinant of marital fertility, p. 173
D. O. Ribar, The effects at teenage fertility on young adult
childbearing, p. 197
K. F. Zimmermann, Editorial, p. 1
J. Broome, The value of life and the value of population, p. 3
MIGRATION
B.R. Chiswick, p. W. Miller, Ethnic networks and language proficiency
among immigrants, p. 19
Ch. Dustmann, The social assimilation of immigrants, p. 37
A. Barrett, Did the decline continue? Comparing the labor-market
quality of United States immigrants from the late 1970’s and
late 1980’s, p. 55
G. A. Bucci. R. Tenorio, On financing the internal enforcement
of illegal immigration policies, p. 65
E. S. Brezis, p. R. Krugman, Immigration, investment and real
wages, p. 83
P. Michel, A. Perrot, J.F. Thisse, Interregional equilibrium
with heterogeneous labor, p. 95
K. F. Zimmermann, Editorial
T. P. Schultz, Y. Zeng, Fertility of rural China. Effects
of local family planning and health programs, p. 329
R.F Schoeni, Marital status and earnings in developed countries, p. 351
POVERTY
B. Gustafsson, Assessing poverty. Some reflections on the
literature, p. 361
M. S. Rendall, A. Speare. Jr., Elderly poverty alleviation
through living with family, p. 383
IRISH HISTORICAL DEMOGRAPHY
K. O’Rourke, Emigration and living standards in Ireland since
the Famine, p. 407
C.O. Gràda, N. Duffy, Fertility control early in marriage
in Ireland a century ago, p. 423
Ninth ESPE Conference and General Assembly in Lisbon, 1995,
p. 433
Acknowledgement to editorial collaborators, p. 439
Contents of volume 8 (1995)
R. Walker, The effect of public policies on recent Swedish
fertility behavior, p. 223
G.G. Liu, An economic analysis of pregnancy resolution in
Virginia: specific as to race and residence, p. 253
S. P. Jenkins, N.C. O’Leary, Modelling domestic work time, p. 265
J. Tiefenthaler, Deviations from the least-cost diets for
infants, p. 281
C. A. Echevarria, On age distribution of population, government
expenditure and fiscal federalism, p. 301
K.A. Konrad, Social security and strategic inter-vivos transfers
of social capital, p. 315
T. I. Garner. K. de Vos, Income sufficiency v. poverty.
Results from the United States and The Netherlands, p. 117
SYMPOSIUM ON: “SOCIAL INSURANCE ECONOMICS”
edited by B.-A. Wickström
F. Breyer, The political economy of rationing in social
health insurance, p. 137
S. D. Flam, A. E. Risa, Market insurance, social insurance
and education, p. 149
W. Peters, Public pensions, family allowances and endogenous
demographic change, p. 161
C. Sedl, The desire for a son is the father of many daughters.
A sex ratio paradox, p. 185
R. K. von Weizsäcker, Public pension reform, demographics
and inequality, p. 205
R. M. Blank, Changes in inequality and unemployment over
the 1980s. Comparative cross-national responses, p. 1
J. E. L. Campos, D. Lien, Political instability and illegal
immigration, p. 23
C. Y. C. Chu, H.C. Lu, Toward a general analysis of endogenous
Easterlin cycles, p. 35
A. Prskawetz, G. Feichtinger, Endogenous population growth
may imply chaos, p. 59
A. Razin, C.-W. Yuen, Utilitarian tradeoff population growth
and income growth, p. 81
J. H. M. Nelissen, Lifetime income redistribution by social
security, p. 89
N. S. Blomquist, H. Wijkander, Fertility waves aggregate savings
and the rate of interest (erratum), p. 107
Eight ESPE conference and general Assembly in Tilburg, 1994,
p. 111
Arie Kapteyn, 1993 President of the European Society for Population
Economics, p. 331
A. Kapteyn, The measurement of household cost functions.
Revealed preference versus subjective measures, p. 333
C.Y.C. Chu, R. D. Lee, Famine, revolt, and the dynastic cycle.
Population in historic China, p. 351
S.F. Leung, Will sex selection reduce fertility?, p. 379
J. Ermisch, N. Ogawa, Age at motherhood in Japan, p. 393
Acknowledgement to editorial collaborators, p. 421
Contents of Volume 7(1994)
M. Blackburn, S. Korenman, The declining marital-status
earnings differential, p. 247
J. Zweimüller, R. Winter-Ebmer, Gender wage differentials
in private and public sector jobs, p. 271
B. Gustafsson, U. Kjulin, Time use in child care and housework
and the total cost of children, p. 287
F. T. Denton, C. H. Feaver, B. G. Spencer, Teachers and the
birth rate. The demographic dynamics of a service population, p. 307
THE ECONOMICS OF INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION: EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE
edited by W. Franz, K. F. Zimmermann
G. L. Borjas, Immigrant skills and ethnic spillovers, p. 99
B. R. Chiswick, p. W. Miller, Language choice among immigrants
in a multi-lingual destination, p. 119
C. Dustmann, Speaking fluency, writing fluency and earnings
of migrants, p. 133
I. N. Gang, F. L. Rivera-Batiz, Labor market effects of immigration
in the United States and Europe. Substitution vs. Complementarity, p. 157
J. P. De New, K. F. Zimmermann, Native wage impacts of foreign
labor: a random effects panel analysis, p. 177
J. Dolado, A. Goria. A. Ichino, Immigration, human capital
and growth in the host country. Evidence from pooled country
data, p. 193
W. Franz, U. Oser, p. Winker, A macroeconometric disequilibrium
analysis of current and future migration from Eastern Europe
into West Germany, p. 217
R. Faini, Workers remittances and the real exchange rate.
A quantitative framework, p. 235
J. A. Brander, S. Dowrick, The- role of fertility and population
in economic growth. Empirical results from aggregate cross-national
data, p. 1
N. S. Blomquist, H. Wijkander, Fertility waves, aggregate
savings and the rate of interest, p. 27
N. Bonneuil, Capital accumulation, inertia of consumption
and norms of reproduction, p. 49
N. Ahn, Effects of the one-child family policy on second and
third births in Hebei, Shaanxi and Shanghai, p. 63
H. R. Clarke, The welfare effects of labour force growth with
internationally mobile capital, p. 79
NEW WORLD PERSPECTIVES ON POPULATION AND DEVELOPMENT SYMPOSIUM
ON THE 5TH CENTURY OF THE DISCOVERY OF AMERICA
edited by A. Cigno
G. Psacharopoulos, Z. Tzannatos, Economic and demographic
effects on working women in Latin America, p. 293
O. S. DeGraff, R. E. Bilsborrow, Female-headed households
and family welfare in rural Ecuador, p. 317
R. E Wright, p. S. Maxim, Immigration policy and immigrant
quality. Empirical evidence from Canada, p. 337
Ph. Michel, p. Pestieau, Population growth and optimality.
When does serendipity hold?, p. 353
Y. Spiegel, Rawlsian optimal population size, p. 363
Acknowledgement to editorial collaborators, p. 375
Contents of Volume 6 (1993)
R. Ray, Optimal demogrants and taxes in a federal welfare
state, p. 199
SYMPOSIUM ON MEASURING POVERTY
edited by G. J. Duncan
G. J. Duncan, B. Gustafsson, A. Hauser, G. Schmauss, H. Messinger,
R. Muffels, B. Nolan, J.- C. Ray, Poverty dynamics in eight
countries, p. 215
K. Van den Bosch, T. CaIlan, J. Estivill. P. Hausman. B. Jeandidier,
A. Muffels, J. Yfantopoulos, A comparison of poverty in seven
European countries and regions using subjective and relative
measures, p. 235
S. E. Mayer, Living conditions among the poor in four rich
countries, p. 261
Seventh ESPE congress General Assembly in Budapest, 1993,
p. 287
N. Anders Klevmarken – 1992 President of the European Society
for Population Economics, p. 103
N. A. Klevmarken, Demographics and the dynamics of earnings, p. 105
H. Verbon, Public pensions. The role of public choice and
expectations, p. 123
J. L. Simon, Economic thought about population consequences:
Some reflections, p. 137
C. Dustmann, Earnings adjustment of temporary migrants, p. 153
D.-H.D. Lien, Asymmetric information and the brain drain, p. 169
J. A. Dunlevy, Migrant stock vs. lagged migrant flow as a
determinant of migrant settlement. A comment on Anjomani and
Hariri, p. 181
T. Abeysinghe, Time cost relative income and fertility in
Canada, p. 189
M. L Blackburn, D. E. Bloom, D. Neumark, Fertility timing,
wages, and human capital, p. 1
C.J. Flinn, Cohort size and schooling choice, p. 31
L. Danziger, S. Neuman, Equality and fertility in the kibbutz, p. 57
C. van Marrewijk, J. Verbeek, On opulence driven poverty traps, p. 67
B. Delhausse, A. Luttgens, S. Perelman, Comparing measures
of poverty and relative deprivation. An example for Belgium, p. 83
Gary S. Becker -Winner of the Nobel Prize in Economics 1992,
p. 251
SYMPOSIUM ON SAVING AND AGE STRUCTURE
edited by A. Cigno
A. Cigno, Savings and age structure. Introduction, p. 257
D. T. Greenwood, E. N. Wolff, Changes in wealth in the United
States, 1962-1983. Savings, capital gains, inheritance, and lifetime
transfers, p. 261
A. Borsch-Supan, Saving and consumption patterns of the elderly.
The German case, p. 289
S. Perelman, p. Pestieau, Inheritance and wealth composition, p. 305
A. Cigno, F. C. Rosati, The effects of financial markets and
social security on saving and fertility behaviour in Italy, p. 319
Acknowledgement to editorial collaborators, p. 345
Contents of Volume- 5 (1992)
Alessandro Cigno – 1991 President of the European Society
for Population Economics, p. 173
A. Cigno, Children and pensions, p. 175
G. S. Becker, Fertility and the economy, p. 185
J. Zhang, B. G. Spencer, Who sings China’s one-child certificate,
and why?, p. 203
W. Sander, Unobserved variables and marital status. The schooling
connection, p. 217
G. Pepermans, Retirement decisions in a discrete choice model
and implications for the government budget. The case of Belgium, p. 229
A. Anjomani, V. Hariri, Migration stock and the issue of
competing and complementary flows in United States interstate
migration, p. 87
G. S. Fields, Modern sector enlargement or traditional sector
enrichment? GNP effects with induced. Migration, p. 101
R. Kochhar, International labor migration and domestic labor
supply, p. 113
O. Galor, The choice of factor mobility in a dynamic world, p. 135
T. Darvish-Lecker, N. Kahana, The destination decision of
political migrants. An economic approach, p. 145
W. Groot, H. A. Pott-Buter, The timing of maternity in the
Netherlands, p. 155
B. L Wolfe, J. R. Behrman, The synthesis economic fertility
model. A latent variable investigation of some critical attributes, p. 1
D. Neumark, Interpreting demographic effects in duration analyses
of first birth intervals, p. 17
A. H. Beller, S. S. Chung, Family structure and educational
attainment of children. Effects of remarriage, p. 39
S. Gustafsson, Separate taxation and married women’s labor
supply. A comparision of West Germany and Sweden, p. 61
R. Boadway, M. Marchand, p. Pestieau, Pay-as-you-go social
security in a changing environment, p. 257
O. S. Mitchell, Social security reforms and poverty among
older dual-earner couples, p. 281
R. E. Wright, Cohort size and earnings in Great Britain, p. 295
Fifth ESPE Congress and General Assembly in Pisa 1991, p.
308
Acknowledgement to editorial collaborators, p. 313
Contents of volume 4 (1991), p. I
ECONOMIC CONSEQUENCES OF AN AGING POPULATION. PART II: EMPIRICAL
EVIDENCE
Edited by S. Cnossen and D. Bös
K. F. Zimmermann, Ageing and the labor market. Age structure,
cohort size and unemployment, p. 117
P. Apps, Tax reform, population ageing and the changing labour
supply behaviour of married women, p. 201
R. V. Burkhauser, G. J. Duncan, United States public policy
and the elderly. The disproportionate risk to the well-being
of women, p. 217
A. Börsch-Supan, K. Stahl, Life cycle savings and consumption
constraints. Theory, empirical evidence, and fiscal implications, p. 233
ECONOMIC CONSEQUENCES OF AN AGING POPULATION. PARI I: THEORY
edited by D. Bös and S. Cnossen
Editors’ note, p. 87
E. Drissert, F. van Winden, Social security in a general
equilibrium model with endogenous government behavior, p. 89
D. E Wildasin, The marginal cost of public funds with an aging
population, p. 111
D. Btanchet, D. Kessler, Optimal pension funding with demographic
instability and endogenous returns on investment, p. 137
W. Peters, Public pensions in transition. An optimal policy
path, p. 155
O. Galor, O. Stark, The impact of differences in the levels
of technology on international labor migration, p. 1
S. Berninghaus, H. G. Seifert-Vogt, A temporary equilibrium
model for international migration, p. 13
J. L. Simon, G. Steinmann, Population growth, farmland, and
the long-run standard of living, p. 37
T Abeysinghe, On testing Easterlin’s hypothesis using relative
cohort size as a proxy for relative income. An analysis of Canadian
data, p. 53
P. S. Carlin, Home investment in husband’s human capital and
the wife’s decision to work, p. 71
J. J. Heckman, J.R. Walker, The third birth in Sweden, p. 235
R. A. Easterlin, Ch. Macdonald, D. J. Macunovich, How have
American baby boomers fared? Earnings and economic well-being
of young adults, 1964-1987, p. 277
B. S. Ferguson, Optimal population control with uncertain
output, p. 291
J. Zhang, Mortality and fertility: How large is the direct
child replacement effect in China?, p. 303
Acknowledgement to editorial collaborators, p. 315
Contents of Volume 3 (1990), p. I
W. Schmähl, Demographic change and social security.
Some elements of a complex relationship, p. 159
A. Prinz, Endogenous fertility, altruistic behavior across
generations, and social security systems, p. 179
C. U. Chiswick, E. L. Lehrer, On marriage-specific human capital.
Its role as a determinant of remarriage, p. 193
P. Jemsen, N. Smith, Unemployment and marital dissolution, p. 215
Fourth ESPE Congress and General Assembly in Instanbul, 1990.
A report, p. 232 .
G. Feichtinger, E. J. Dockner, Capital accumulation, endogenous
population growth, and Easterlin cycles, p. 73
Harrie A. A. Verbon, Transfers to the old, government debt
and demographic change, p. 89
Junsen Zhang, Socioeconomic determinants of fertility in China.
A microeconometric analysis, p. 105
Naci H. Mocan, Business cycles and fertility dynamics in the
United States. A vector autoregressive model, p. 125
Alok Bhargava, An econometric analysis of the U.S. postwar
G.N.P., p. 147
John Ermisch -1989 President of the European Society for Population
Economics, p. 1
John Ermisch, European women’s employment and fertility
again, p. 3
J. R. Behrman, p. Taubman, A comparison and latent variable
test of two fertile ideas, p. 19
T. Barmby, A. Cigno, A sequential probability model of fertility
patterns, p. 31
G. Sohwödiauer, A. Wenig, The impact of taxation on the
distribution of wealth in an economy with changing population, p. 53
W.R. Reed, K. Harford, The marriage premium and compensating
wage differentials, p. 237
G. Feichtinger, G. Sorger, Self-generated fertility waves
in a non-linear continuous overlapping generations model,
p. 267
H. Kondo, International factor mobility and production technology, p. 281
B. Dutta., I. N. Gang, S. Gangopadhyay, Subsidy policies with
capital accumulation: Maintaining employment levels, p. 301
Acknowledgement to editorial collaborators, p. 319
Contents of volume 2 (1989), p. I
F. T. Denton, B. G. Spencer, Macro-effects of changes in
household preferences for children. Simulated history and future
time paths, p. 165
D. Lam, Population growth, age structure, and age-specific
productivity. Does a uniform age distribution minimize lifetime
wages?, p. 189
R. Ray, The behavioural and welfare implications of housing
demand under rationing. The United Kingdom experience, p. 211
S. Hadzivukovic, Population growth and economic development.
A case study of Yugoslavia, p. 225
J. F. Ermisch, Purchased child care, optimal family size
and mother’s employment Theory and econometric analysis, p. 79
K. Matsushita, Economic analysis of age at first marriage, p. 103
Z. Tzannatos, J. Symons, An economic approach to fertility
in Britain since 1860, p. 121
R. H. Day, K-H. Kim, D. Macunovich, Complex demoeconomic dynamics, p. 139
Third ESPE Congress and General Assembly in Paris, 1989. A
report, p. 162
Pierre Pestieau -1988 President of the European Society for
Population Economics, p. 1
P. Pestieau, The demographics of inequality, p. 3
L. Danziger, S. Neuman, Intergenerational effects on fertility.
Theory and evidence from Israel, p. 25
S. Possebon, O. S. Mitchell, Married women’s retirement behavior, p. 39
D. Mont, Two earner family migration. A search theoretic approach, p. 55
W. A. Jackson, Utilitarian pension and retirement policies
under population ageing, p. 73
R. Moffitt, Demographic behavior and the welfare state.
Econometric issues in the identification of the effects of tax
and transfer programs, p. 237
E. L. Lehrer, Preschoolers with working mothers. An analysis
of the determinants of child care arrangements, p. 251
J. Ermisch, Intergenerational transfers in industrialised
countries. Effects of age distribution and economic institutions, p. 269
B. Bental, The old age security hypothesis and optimal population
growth, p. 285
Acknowledgement to editorial collaborators, p. 303
Contents to Volume 1 (1988/1989), p. I
E. van Imhoff, Age structure, education, and the transmission
of technical change, p. 167
D. Blanchet, Age structure and capital dilution effects in
neo-classical growth models, p. 183
S. Beminghaus, H. G. Seifert-Vogt, Temporary vs. permanent
migration. A decision theoretical approach, p. 195
R. Ray, Household composition and optimal commodity taxes.
Do demographic variables matter?, p. 213
V. Rao, Diet, mortality and life expectancy. A cross national
analysis, p. 225
S. F. Leung, On tests for sex preferences, p. 95
N. Smith, N. Westergard-Nielsen, Wage differentials due to
gender, p. 115
M. S. Kimenyi, W. E.. Shughart II, R. D. Tollison, An interest-group
theory of population growth, p. 131
A. Rodriguez, The dependency ratio and optimum population
growth. The total utility case, p. 141
O. Stark, S. Yitzhaki, Merging populations, stochastic dominance
and Lorenz curves, p. 157
Second ESPE Congress and General Assembly in Mannehim, 1988.
A report, p. 163
K. F. Zimmermann, Editorial, p. 1
B. M. S. van Praag, The notion of population economics, p. 3
M. Nerlove, Population policy and individual choice, p. 17
R. K. von Weizsäcker, Age structure and income distribution policy, p. 33
O. Stark, S. Yilzhaki, Labour migration as a response to relative deprivation, p. 57
D. J. Macunovich, R. A. Easterlin, Application of Granger-Sims causality tests to monthly fertility data, 1958-1984, p. 71
First ESPE Congress and General Assembly in Rotterdam 1987.
A report, p. 90
European society for population economics. Statutes, p. 93