Empirical Models

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Empirical Models

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Title: Empirical Models


1
Empirical Models
  • David Canning
  • Harvard University

2
I. Effects of Fertility Redcution
3
Economic Stories for Fertility Reduction
  • Technological change has increased the returns to
    education/ lowered cost of education.
  • Falling child mortality has reduced the
    insurance demand for children and reduced
    wasted educational costs.
  • Falling contribution of children to household
    finances with urbanization.
  • Rising value of time (higher wages and human
    capital) children are time expensive.

4
Desired Fertility and Actual Fertility
  • Economic theory concentrates on changes in
    desired fertility.
  • Desired fertility may vary between male and
    female partners. Household bargaining model
    versus unitary household.
  • Actual Fertility may differ from desired
    fertility role of contraception

5
Empirical Effects of Low Fertility
  • Fertility is chosen. May be a consequence of
    female work decisions and desired education of
    children
  • We want to find structural effect of lower
    fertility. Evidence for this requires exogenous
    change in fertility.

6
Instruments for FertilitySex Ratio
  • Sex ratio of previous births is random and
    affects future fertility.
  • Son preference
  • Mixed sex preference
  • Problem sex ratio may affect household income
    (dowries) and desired investment in kids giving
    direct effect of child health and education
    investments.
  • Randomness?

7
Instruments for FertilityTwins
  • Twins are random. Increase family size more
    than planned.
  • Problem twins are less healthy than average due
    to sharing of mothers resources during fetal
    development. Timing/spacing of births may have
    effects on resource availability.
  • Randomness?

8
Instruments for FertilityAbortion Laws
  • Abortion laws affect fertility
  • About 26 of pregnancies end in abortion
  • Large fertility effect e.g. US state laws
  • Abortion laws may be endogenous
  • Control for country fixed effects, time trend and
    country x time trend effects.
  • Precise timing may be exogenous
  • Some reversals of trend to more liberal laws.

9
Data
  • Female Labor Market Participation (ILO 2007)
  • By cohort (15-19, 20-25,,60-64)
  • 1950-2000
  • 97 countries
  • Fertility (WDI 2006)
  • Total fertility rate
  • Abortion Index (United Nations Population
    Division 2002)
  • Abortion Health Index physical and mental health
    of the mother, rape, fetal impairment
  • Abortion Availability Index economic hardship,
    on request

10
Empirical Specification
Estimated Equation
Pijt female labor force participation of age
group i, country j, year t kjt capital stock
per working age person urbanjt population
living in urban area () fschooljt average
years of schooling for females gt15 years of
age mschooljt average years of schooling for
males gt15 years of age
11
Female Labor Force Participation (25-29)
12
First Stage Regressions
13
Age Group Specific Fertility Effects
14
Total Dynamic Effect of Fertility Decline
15
SIMULATION
  • Economy with
  • no technological progress
  • constant survival schedule
  • Constant education rates
  • Investigate the effect of fertility reduction
  • Calibrate to South Korea education/survival/fertil
    ity

16
Simulation Framework I
  • Production Function
  • Physical Capital Stock
  • Parameterization

17
Simulation Framework II
  • Demographic Structure
  • Human Capital

18
Specific Example South Korea
1960 2000
Fertility (TFR) 5.6 1.2
Life Expectancy at birth 55.2 76.8
Female Labor Market Participation (25-29) 26.3 55.7
19
Fertility and Female Labor Market Participation -
Korea
20
Simulation Scenarios
  • Baseline Initial steady state 1960.
  • Add actual fertility reductions
  • Solow model population effect on capital labor
    ratio
  • Age Structure Demographic Change with fixed
    cohort specific participation rates
  • Age Structure plus Female Labor Supply

21
Results
22
Korea Simulated Demographic Structure
23
Korea Demographics and Workers per Capita
24
Simulation Results Summary
  • Demographic transition has important effects on
    long term per capita income. The magnitude of
    these effects can be sizeable and depends on
  • Aging and old age labor force participation
  • The magnitude of the female labor supply response
    to fertility declines.

25
Conclusions
  • Empirical results suggest that the decline in
    fertility leads to a significant increase in
    female labor force participation
  • This increase in female labor force participation
    compounds the positive long term growth effects
    induced by the demographic transition
  • The magnitude of this effect depends on the
    participation behavior of the 65 age group the
    focus of our complementary study

26
II. Heath and Life Span Effects
27
Health and Life Span Effects
  • Value of Health/Lifespan Improvements
  • Health and Worker Productivity
  • Life spans and life cycle behavior
  • retirement
  • Consumption/savings
  • Institutions
  • Health lifespan and education

28
Value of Health Improvements
  • Welfare Gain from Lifespan Improvement
  • Value of life span gain in money units.
  • Vale of a statistical life
  • What money gain would give the same welfare
    benefit as the gain in life expectancy?

29
Individual Utility
  • Life time welfare
  • Budget constraint

30
Indirect Utility
  • Assuming
  • Annuity of 1 for life has value

31
Equivalent Variation
  • Survival rates rise from S0 to S1 while income
    rises from y0 to y1
  • The equivalent variation e (rise in annual
    income) of the health improvement solves
  • Or

32
Approximation of EV
  • Using a Taylor series expansion
  • The equivalent variation depends on the
    discounted growth in survival and the level of
    income

33
Value of Life Span Increases
  • We can estimate the equivalent variation if we
    know the age specific survival function before
    and after, the level of income and the shape of
    the utility function.
  • The utility function needs to be determined both
    in terms of its slope ( higher order terms may be
    important as well) and its intercept notice we
    implicitly take the utility of being dead to be
    zero.
  • U(c) is the utility of being alive and having
    consumption c. We can find the intercept from
    value of life studies.

34
Health and Full Income
  • Health adds directly to welfare as well as acting
    as an input into production.
  • Value of Life studies put a high monetary
    valuation on small risks of death.
  • Over 50 of welfare gain in US from 1900 has been
    lifespan (Nordhaus).
  • Calibration of utility function as in Becker,
    Philipson and Soares (2005).

35
Health and Worker Productivity
  • Issues
  • No consensus on how to define health
  • Health status indicators have large measurement
    errors.
  • Effect is bi-directional we cannot infer
    causality from correlation.

36
Measuring Health CapitalMultiple Indicators of
Health
  • Self assessed health status
  • Morbidity Rates
  • Physical function limitations
  • Physical growth outcomes

37
Health Human Capital
  • We are interested in health that comes as a
    result of health and other investments
    controlled health.
  • Uncontrolled health , e.g. due to genetic
    differences will affect productivity but is not
    health capital.
  • Compare with IQ and schooling as human capital.
  • Ideally we would measure the effect of a health
    input on health status and then trace out the
    effect of the improved health status on
    productivity but this is rare.

38
Feedbacks from Income to Health
  • Model has three functions which occur
    simultaneously.
  • Health is a function of health and other inputs
    (including shocks).
  • People decide, based on their income, on inputs
    and activities that affect health.
  • Health affects productivity and income

39
Analytical Framework
  • Health production function
  • Health H
  • Health inputs l
  • Exogenous health factors (genetic etc.) g usually
    unobserved
  • Random error e1

40
Input determination
  • The level of inputs depends on household
    characteristics, such as wage earnings W, and the
    availability of inputs X
  • We solve out for the effect of current health
    h on input demands.

41
Productivity
  • Wages W depend on health H, education E, other
    factors Z and an error term

42
Estimation Problems
  • We have measurement error in health biases
    results downwards.
  • Health affect wages but wages also affect health
    via their effect on health inputs we have
    reverse causality.
  • We only want the human capital element of
    healths contribution to wages, not the genetic
    component.

43
Problems can be overcome using an instrumental
variable
  • Suppose instead of health we use predicted health
    based on the local availability of health
    services and factors that can used as policies to
    affect health.
  • This removes measurement error
  • This removes the reverse causality since the
    predicted health is independent of an
    individuals wage.
  • The predicted health measure is pure controlled
    health and does not include any individual
    specific uncontrolled health.

44
Empirical Results on Wages Determinants
  • All these variables are instrumented- for example
    by local food prices or distance to a health
    facility when young
  • Calories important (below 2000 kcal).
  • Proteins important
  • BMI important
  • Height important
  • Days ill/working days lost important

45
Lifespan, Retirement, and Saving
  • Mis-match between time path of labor income and
    consumption.
  • Cash and in kind transfers within the household
    and between generations through bequests.
  • Transfers through the social security system.
  • Private Saving/borrowing.

46
Savings Rates
Source PWT6.1
47
Micro to Macro
  • Macro focus on age structure effects.
  • In micro data savings rates vary by age with a
    peak at around 55 but these age effects on
    household savings are modest.
  • Most of the savings boom in East Asia was due to
    higher savings at every age with only a modest
    contribution from age structure effects.
  • Accounting effects of demographic change can only
    explain a small fraction of variation in savings.
  • We need to explain changes in saving behavior at
    each age.

48
Savings Booms
  • Increase in individual savings due to
    improvements in health and longevity?
  • Major alternative theory is habit formation in
    consumption.
  • Effect of new financial institutions is also
    possible

49
Why Longevity Could Raise Savings Rates
  • Possible Arguments
  • Unhealthy life span increase.
  • Effect of longer lifespan on compounding when
    interest rates and income growth are positive.
  • Effect on returns to saving. Without annuities,
    a high mortality rate reduces effective returns.
  • Our Argument
  • Social security system incentives restrict labor
    supply of the elderly and effectively limit the
    retirement age.

50
Critique Compression of Morbidity
  • If longer life spans are associated with healthy
    aging (compression of morbidity), optimal
    response is to extend the working life with
    little impact on savings rates.
  • We can regard a longer life as stretching time,
    which stretches the retirement age but does not
    affect savings rates.
  • The empirical effect of longevity on savings
    lacks a theoretical foundation.

51
National Life Expectancy and Health, 2000
H Healthy life expectancy LLife expectancy H
-7.062 0.979 L (0.615) (0.010) R2
0.982
Data from World Health Report 2001
52
Data for 2000, from World Health Report 2001
53
Hypothesis
  • Under complete markets the effect of longer life
    spans on savings rates is zero or even negative
  • A positive effect of longevity on savings rates
    depends on the presence of institutions that
    prevent or discourage longer working lives.

54
Life Cycle Theory
  • Maximize lifetime utility with a budget
    constraint

55
Assumptions
  • Full insurance annuities
  • Exogenous health and mortality
  • Constant death rate
  • Disutility of work rises with age but depends on
    life expectancy compression of morbidity

56
Optimal Consumption and Retirement
  • Two conditions optimal consumption over time.
  • Optimal retirement wage times marginal utility
    of consumption equals the disutility of working.
  • General solution defines retirement and
    consumption by an implicit function.

57
Figure 1 Retirement and Consumption
58
Assume Log Utility
  • Use implicit function theorem to find optimal
    retirement and consumption

59
Wage Level Effects
  • In a model with log utility the wage level does
    not affect the retirement decision income and
    substitution effects balance.
  • With a general utility function (CRRA gt 1),
    rising wages promote earlier retirement and a
    lower consumption/wage ratio, i.e., a higher
    savings rate.

60
Preliminary Empirical Results Micro
  • Use HRS survey. Gives good measures of household
    wealth and subjective survival probabilities for
    individuals.
  • Question do people who expect to live longer
    save more and so hold more wealth?
  • Problem all current variables depend on wealth.
    Subjective survival probabilities depend on
    wealth and have large measurement error (lots of
    0 or 1 in replies).

61
Estimation
  • Model current Wealth as depending on
  • Inheritances.
  • Planned accumulation to date as proxied by a
    function of age, schooling, and height.
  • Probability of survival to 75, instrumented with
    parents current age, or age at death.
  • Unplanned accumulation to date, the error term.

62
Results
  • Wealth increases with inheritances.
  • Wealth increases with height and education,
    probably reflecting higher income.
  • Wealth increases with age in the HRS sample
    (primarily between 40 and 60).
  • Instrumented subjective survival probabilities
    have a positive and significant effect on
    wealth holdings. (Passes instrument validity
    test).

63
Macro Saving
  • Aggregation over cohorts is not stright forward
    depends on the distribution of income.
  • Age specific savings rates may rise while average
    savings rates fall when life span increases.
  • Zero savings over lifespan means zero saving on
    average in steady state saving is a
    disequilibrium phenomenon.

64
Increasing Longevity and Saving
Saving Rate
T
T
0
Age
65
Aggregate Savings Rates
  • In a stable population, with a fixed life
    expectancy, net life cycle savings are zero.
  • A rise in life expectancy with a fixed age
    structure increases aggregate savings the saving
    of the young and middle aged for retirement is
    larger than the dis-saving of the older
    generation.
  • This saving boom is temporary it disappears when
    the age structure adjusts to a stable structure
    given the higher lifetimes.

66
Table 5 Effects on Steady-State Saving Rate
Effect on Steady-State Saving Rate (percentage points)
Old/ Working Age Ratio rises by 0.01 -1.336 (4.07)
Life expectancy rises by 1 year with universal coverage, mandatory retirement, and a fully funded system 0.424 (2.27)
Life expectancy rises by 1 year with universal coverage, mandatory retirement and a pay-as-you-go system with replacement rate of 0.5 0.003 (0.02)
Life expectancy rises by 1 year with universal coverage, mandatory retirement and a pay-as-you-go system with replacement rate of 1.0 -0.418 (1.90)
Effect of introducing a retirement incentive with life expectancy at 66 years. 2.489 (2.23)
Effect of introducing a retirement incentive with life expectancy at 81 years. 3.055 (3.48)
Effect of moving from a pay-as-you-go system (replacement rate 1.0) to a fully funded system with life expectancy 66 years. 0.005 (0.16)
Effect of moving from a pay-as-you-go system (replacement rate 1.0) to a fully funded system with life expectancy 81 years. 13.148 (2.93)
67
Health and Education
  • Health and cognitive development
  • Incentive effects from longer working life
  • Lower depreciation of human capital
  • Heath and education complementarities
  • Fewer working days lost

68
III. The Demographic Dividend
69
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70
Evidence
  • 1986 NAS report
  • The report was revisionist (Kelley 2001) as
    opposed to other population-alarmist reports.
  • Little evidence of effects at country level

71
Environment and Population
  • CO2 Emissions rise with population but are more
    elastic with respect to income
  • Log CO21.12 Log Pop 1.48 Log Y
  • (0.01) (0.03)
  • R2 0.897
  • Panel data (5 year)1960-2000 time dummies
    included
  • Major threat is rising incomes in India and China
  • Acid rain and ozone deletion have had an
    effective global institutional response.
  • Global institutional response to global warming
    has been weak.

72
Capital and Land Effects
  • Free movement of capital prevents declinei n
    capital/labor ratios.
  • Effects may be large if capital markets are
    closed/imperfect.
  • Land effects may be large in agricultural
    societies.
  • But land shortage may spur industrialization.

73
Components of Population Growth
  • Kelly and Schmidt 1995
  • While growth of population numbers does not
    matter, components do matter.
  • Population growth birth rate- death rate. High
    birth and death rates both seem to have a
    negative effect on growth.
  • Lagged (15 year) birth rate sometimes positive
  • handout

74
Importance and Problems
  • Components of population growth may matter even
    if pop growth is neutral on average.
  • Fixed effects estimators are biased
  • Does not distinguish behavioral effects from
    accounting effects

75
Age Structure Effects
76
Age Structure Effects(continued)
77
Estimating Equation
  • Working age pop growth
  • Population growth

78
Constraints
  • Equation is derived from an identity.
  • Some parameters are fixed by the identity
  • Coefficients on log initial participation rate p
    and and working age share of pop c should be
    equal size and opposite to coefficient on initial
    income.
  • Coefficients on participation rate growth, work
    age pop growth and pop growth should be 1, 1, -1.
  • Why estimate these?

79
1 2 3
OLS 2SLS 2SLS
log working age over total pop 0.257 (0.118) 0.284 (0.125) 0.180 (0.143)
log participation rate -0.186 (0.058) -0.166 (0.058) -0.164 (0.062)
growth of participation rate -0.570 (0.302) -0.280 (0.527) -0.212 (0.560)
growth of working age over total pop 0.789 (0.329) 1.222 (0.575) -0.793 (0.973)
growth of working age ratio times openness 3.328 (1.184)
80
Estimation versus identity
  • Identity should be found by estimator if model is
    correct
  • Difference between estimate and identity reflects
    mis-specification.
  • Model may not adjust fully for changes in labor
    quality when labor quantity is changing rapidly.
  • Identity assumes full employment of resources.

81
Demographic Dividend is not Automatic
  • Depends on effective policies in other areas
  • Education
  • Labor market
  • Trade
  • Governance
  • Macroeconomic management
  • Latin America provides example of "unreaped
    dividend"

82
Case Study Ireland
  • Rapid Economic Growth 1990s
  • Celtic Tiger
  • Approaching East Asian Growth Miracle rates.

83
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84
Sub-Saharan Africas population
85
East Asia's Population
86
Ireland's Population
87
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88
Why this rapid demographic change in Ireland?
  • Mortality rates at European norms.
  • Fertility rates high by European standards until
    1979.
  • Rapid fertility decline after 1979.
  • High levels of migration.

89
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90
Family Planning in Ireland
  • 1969 The Fertility Guidance Company Ltd. is
    formed (predecessor of the IFPA)
  • 1973 Irish Supreme Court legalizes the
    importation of contraceptives for personal use
  • 1979 Health (Family Planning) Act becomes law
    sale of contraceptives legalized for family
    planning (with prescription)
  • 1985 Amendment to 1979 law makes contra-ceptives
    available to those over 18 without prescription.

91
Migration in Ireland
  • Relatively large fluctuations endogenous
    response to economic performance
  • Sizable impacts on age structure
  • Out-migration mainly among 15-24 year olds
  • In-migration mainly among 35-44 year olds, plus
    their children

92
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96
Ireland Conclusion
  • Demographic change has promoted economic
    performance in Ireland.
  • Fertility decline was abetted by the family
    planning movement in Ireland and the legalization
    of contraception.
  • The policy environment in Ireland favored capture
    of the demographic dividend.
  • Ireland's natural demographic dividend is now at
    its peak.

97
Questions
  • Age structure effects accounting versus
    behavior.
  • Conditions that interact with effects of the
    demographic dividend.
  • Link from fertility and mortality to age
    structure formal demography.
  • Importance of Migration.

98
Demographic Accounting
  • Age structure effects are accounting to some
    extent.
  • Assume age specific behavior remains the same and
    examine the effect of age structure changes
  • But there are also behavioral effects

99
Mortality Rates
  • Declines in age specific mortality rates change
    age structure.
  • Mortality decline leads to increase in longevity
    may have life cycle effects.
  • Mortality decline also linked to morbidity
    decline healthier people.

100
Birth Rates
  • Changes in the birth rate affects age structure
  • Birth rates changes are usually linked to female
    labor supply.
  • Labor supply and fertility jointly determined
    (not one causes the other).
  • Lower fertility may be linked to higher levels of
    investment in human capital.

101
Policy Interaction
  • What policies are most important for making use
    of the extra labor supply that comes from the
    demographic transition?
  • Labor market, openness, etc.
  • Ireland and many good features.

102
Explanations for Irelands Growth
  • EU membership and subsidies
  • Increased trade and FDI, partly due to tax
    incentives
  • Delayed convergence
  • Good macroeconomic management
  • Social contract between government, trade unions,
    and employers
  • Education expansion in the 1970s.
  • (Transfer pricing)

103
Age Structure and Fertility
  • Can we rewrite of growth age structure identity
    in terms of fertility and mortality rates?
  • Clearly lagged birth and death rates matter for
    current age structure
  • Simple relationship?

104
Migration
  • Migration is clearly endogenous
  • Responds to domestic and international
    opportunities.
  • Primarily movements of working age population.
  • Loss mitigated by remittances.
  • Welfare criteria especially unclear with
    migration.

105
The End
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