Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-ndmmz Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-05-04T07:13:34.865Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Effect of fewer births on average income

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 July 2008

Stephen Enke
Affiliation:
Tempo, Center for Advanced Studies, General Electric Company, 816 State St., P.O. Drawer QQ, Santa Barbara, California 93102
Richard G. Zind
Affiliation:
Tempo, Center for Advanced Studies, General Electric Company, 816 State St., P.O. Drawer QQ, Santa Barbara, California 93102

Summary

This study analyses, for the dynamic economy of a typical less developed country (LDC), the significance for economic development over 30 years of gradual reductions in age-specific fertility rates (assumed to result from a government-supported birth reduction campaign).

The computer results, using parameters typical of poorer LDCs, include the following:

1. A modest birth control programme, costing perhaps 30 cents a year per head of national population, can raise average income over only 15 years by almost twice the percentage that it would rise without birth control;

2. Such a birth control programme, including more exposed couples every year until half of them are practising contraception, yields an undiscounted return on cost of 13 times in 5 years and 80 times in 30 years;

3. The value of permanently preventing the birth of a marginal infant is about twice an LDCs annual income per head;

4. Without birth control, to achieve similar rises in income per head, the rate of productive innovation would have to be about 1½ times the typical rate assumed;

5. Saving propensities would have to be from 2 to 3 times as great as are assumed typical if similar income increases per head are to be realized without birth control.

The model employed uses age-specific death, fertility, and consumption rates for an annually changing age distribution of population. It also uses a national production function that takes into account the changing stocks and productivities of labour and capital, saving propensities that vary with disposable income and the rate of productive innovation. Consequently, it can trace, in more detail than any demographic–economic model yet described in the literature, the incidence of whatever fertility reductions may result from government or private birth control programmes.*

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1969

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

References and sources

Berelson, B. (1964) National family planning programs: a guide. Studies in Family Planning, No. 5, Suppl.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Berelson, B. (Ed.) (1966) Family Planning and Population Programs. University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Byung, M.L. & Isbister, J. (1966) The impact of birth control programs in fertility. In: Family Planning and Population Programs. Edited by Berelson, B.. University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Clark, C. (1967) Population Growth and Land Use. Macmillan, London.Google Scholar
Coale, A.J. (1963) Population and economic development. In: The Population Dilemma. Edited by Hauser, P.M.. Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliff, N.J.Google Scholar
Coale, A.J. & Hoover, E.M. (1958) Population Growth and Economic Development in Low-Income Countries. Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Davis, K. (1967) Population policy: will current programs succeed? Science, N. Y. 158, 730.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Demeny, P. (1965) Investment allocation and population control. Demography, 2, 203.Google Scholar
Enke, S. (1960a) The gains to India from population control: some money measures and incentive schemes. Rev. Econ. Statist. 42, 175.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Enke, S. (1960b) The economics of government payments to limit population. Econ. Devel. Cult. Change, 8, 339.Google Scholar
Enke, S. (1963a) Population and development: a general model. Q. Jl Econ. 77, 55.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Enke, S. (1963b) Economics for Development. Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliff, N.J.Google Scholar
Enke, S. (1966) Some aspects of slowing population growth. Econ. J. 76, 41.Google Scholar
Freedman, R. (1965) The transition from high to low fertility: challenge to demographers. Population Index, 31, 4. Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Hoover, E.M. & Perlman, M. (1966) Measuring the effects of population control on economic development: a case study of Pakistan. Pakistan Development Review, 6, 545.Google Scholar
Kuznets, S. (1967) Population and economic growth. Proc. Am. phil. Soc. 3, 170.Google Scholar
Leibenstein, H. (1957) Economic Backwardness and Economic Growth. Wiley, New York.Google Scholar
Lorimer, F. (1965) The economics of family formation under different conditions. World Population Conference,Belgrade, Paper No. 306.Google Scholar
Meier, R.L. (1959) Modern Science and the Problem of Human Fertility. Wiley, New York.Google Scholar
Notestein, F. (1950) The population of the world in the year 2000. J. Am. statist. Ass. 45, 251.Google Scholar
Ohlin, G. (1967) Population Control and Economic Development Chap. 8. OECD, Paris.Google Scholar
Perrin, E.B. & Sheps, M.C. (1963) Human Reproduction: A Stochastic Process. International Statistical Institute.Google Scholar
Ross, J.A. (1966) Cost of family planning programs. In: Family Planning and Population Programs. Ed. Berelson, B.. University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Spengler, J.J. (1966) The economist and the population question. Am. econ. Rev. 56, 1.Google Scholar
Stycos, J.M. (1962) A critique of the traditional planned parenthood approach in underdeveloped areas. In: Research in Family Planning. Edited by Kiser, C. V.. Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Takeshita, J.Y. (1965) Birth control in some of the developing countries of the Far East. World Population Conference,Belgrade, Paper No. 309.Google Scholar
Tietze, C. (1965) Effectiveness, acceptability and safety of modern contraceptive methods. World Population Conference,Belgrade, Paper No. 205.Google Scholar