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Schooling and Cohort Size: Evidence from Vietnam, Thailand, Iran and Cambodia

  • Evangelos M. Falaris EMAIL logo und Thuan Q. Thai
Veröffentlicht/Copyright: 3. August 2018

Abstract

In many developing countries, the annual number of births has reached a peak in recent years and has declined since that time. We investigate how the schooling that individuals complete responds to the changes in the number of potential labor market competitors implied by changes in the annual number of births. We use census data from Vietnam, Thailand, Iran and Cambodia and document a similar pattern in all of them: holding other characteristics constant, individuals born during the upswing of the demographic cycle complete less schooling than individuals born during the downswing of the demographic cycle. Our estimates suggest that individuals' schooling choices mitigate the possibly adverse economic effects of the demographic cycle. For developing countries that are at earlier phases of the demographic transition, our study lets us predict schooling levels as the demographic transition moves forward.

JEL Classification: J11; J24; I25

Acknowledgements

We thank Saul Hoffman, Charles Link, Adrienne Lucas, Bo Malmgren and James Mulligan for their comments.

Appendix

Table 4:

Estimates of relative cohort size average marginal effects for alternative definitions of relative cohort size.

Vietnam3-year time frame men3-year time frame women7-year time frame men7-year time frame women
Older relative cohort1.6761.684−5.582−6.440
(1.627)(1.855)(1.824)(1.899)
Younger relative cohort0.7771.0604.9615.703
(0.674)(0.794)(1.181)(1.254)
Thailand
Older relative cohort−1.667−4.385−2.253−4.034
(1.148)(1.576)(0.793)(0.962)
Younger relative cohort1.5714.7512.0533.903
(1.292)(1.724)(1.061)(0.936)
Iran
Older relative cohort−0.238−0.321−0.439−0.516
(0.068)(0.076)(0.125)(0.064)
Younger relative cohort0.5760.1380.7530.476
(0.331)(0.308)(0.182)(0.256)
Cambodia
Older relative cohort−1.531−1.868−0.890−1.175
(0.422)(0.443)(0.411)(0.053)
Younger relative cohort6.8377.1353.8894.016
(1.512)(1.398)(0.205)(0.241)
  1. Note: Standard error estimates adjusted for clustering by birth year are in parentheses.

Table 5:

Tests of equality of relative cohort size estimated average marginal effects for alternative relative cohort size definitions and point estimates of relative cohort size average marginal effects based on 5-year time frame.

VietnamMenWomen
3-year time frameχ2(2) = 81.75χ2(2) = 77.37
Pr. = 0.000Pr. = 0.000
7-year time frameχ2(2) = 3.63χ2(2) = 4.37
Pr. = 0.163Pr. = 0.112
Thailand
3-year time frameχ2(2) = 1.11χ2(2) = 0.16
Pr. = 0.574Pr. = 0.925
7-year time frameχ2(2) = 0.65χ2(2) = 0.52
Pr. = 0.723Pr. = 0.772
Iran
3-year time frameχ2(2) = 5.00χ2(2) = 10.24
Pr. = 0.082Pr. = 0.006
7-year time frameχ2(2) = 0.90χ2(2) = 1.53
Pr. = 0.638Pr. = 0.464
Cambodia
3-year time frameχ2(2) = 4.39χ2(2) = 5.75
Pr. = 0.111Pr. = 0.057
7-year time frameχ2(2) = 38.57χ2(2) = 50.91
Pr. = 0.000Pr. = 0.000
  1. Note: Standard error estimates are adjusted for clustering by birth year.

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Published Online: 2018-08-03

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