Demographic Change and Long-Run Development
Matteo Cervellati and Uwe Sunde
Abstract
Over the last two hundred years, mortality and fertility levels in the Western world have dropped to unprecedented levels. This demographic transition was accompanied by an economic transition that led to widespread education and economic growth after centuries of near-stagnation. At the same time, other changes have occurred in family structures, culture, and the organization of society. Economists have only recently begun to take into account the demographic transition from high mortality and high fertility when modeling and researching economic development. This book reviews recent approach ... More
Over the last two hundred years, mortality and fertility levels in the Western world have dropped to unprecedented levels. This demographic transition was accompanied by an economic transition that led to widespread education and economic growth after centuries of near-stagnation. At the same time, other changes have occurred in family structures, culture, and the organization of society. Economists have only recently begun to take into account the demographic transition from high mortality and high fertility when modeling and researching economic development. This book reviews recent approaches to economic demography, considering such topics as the bio-geographic origins of comparative development differences; the role of health improvements and mortality decline; as well as physiological, familial, cultural, and social aspects. After an overview of the study of demography and economic demography, the chapters cover subjects including the Neolithic era and the period of the formation of states and social institutions; longevity and economic growth; household decision making and fertility; land inequality, education, and marriage in nineteenth century Prussia; and caste systems and technology in pre-modern societies. The book concludes with a call for further investigation of the institutional and social factors that influence demographics and economies, suggesting that unified growth theory offers a potential approach to studying development.
Keywords:
mortality,
fertility,
Western world,
family structures,
demographic transition,
economic development,
economic demography
Bibliographic Information
Print publication date: 2017 |
Print ISBN-13: 9780262036627 |
Published to MIT Press Scholarship Online: May 2018 |
DOI:10.7551/mitpress/9780262036627.001.0001 |
Authors
Affiliations are at time of print publication.
Matteo Cervellati, editor
University of Bologna
Uwe Sunde, editor
University of Munich
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