Search  
Northwestern
More help... IPR
You are here: IPR home page > Publications > Working Papers



Events
   Colloquia
   Policy Briefings

Research Programs

IPR Centers
   Cells to Society (C2S)
   Q-Center

Publications
   Working Papers
   Books
   Newsletters

People
   Faculty Fellows
   Faculty Associates
   Postdoctoral Fellows
   Graduate Students
   Staff
   E-mail/Phone list

Media Resources

IPR in the News
   
IPR Information
   About Us
   Contact Us
   Job Opportunities
   Directions

Affiliated Groups

Need more help?
   Site Map
   Return to Homepage


 


 

WP-02-18

Charles F. Manski and Joram Mayshar

Abstract

Whereas most of the world has experienced decreasing fertility during the past half century, Israel has experienced a puzzling mix of trends. Completed fertility has decreased sharply in some ethnic-religious groups (Mizrahi Jews and non-Bedouin Arabs) and increased moderately in other groups (non-ultra-orthodox Ashkenazi and Israeli-born Jews). In a phenomenon that can only be described as a reverse fertility transition, fertility has increased substantially (from about three to six children per woman) among ultra-orthodox Ashkenazi and Israeli-born Jews. This paper explores how private and social incentives for fertility may have combined to produce the complex pattern of fertility in Israel. Theoretical analysis of the social dynamics of fertility shows that this pattern could have been generated by the joint effects of (1) private preferences for childbearing, (2) preferences for conformity to group fertility norms, and (3) the major child-allowance program introduced by the Israeli government in the 1970s. Econometric analysis of fertility decisions shows that fundamental identification problems make it difficult to infer the actual Israeli fertility process from data on completed fertility. Hence we are able to conjecture meaningfully on what may have happened, but we cannot definitively resolve the Israeli fertility puzzles.

Charles F. Manski, Department of Economics
Joram Mayshar,
Department of Economics, Hebrew University of Jerusalum



Click on the working paper title at the top of this
page to download a free pdf of the paper.*

If You Need to Order a Hard Copy: Hard copies of IPR working papers cost $5.00 each (international orders are $10 each). We only accept checks drawn on U.S. bank and payable in U.S. funds. Checks or money orders should be made payable to Northwestern University and sent to the following address:

Publications Department - WP Orders
Institute for Policy Research
2040 Sheridan Rd., Evanston, IL 60208-4100.

For information, call 847-491-8712 or email ipr@northwestern.edu.
Please note that we do not accept credit cards.

*Adobe Acrobat Reader 5.0 (or higher) is needed to read the Acrobat pdf. If you need to install Acrobat Reader, click the button below. Once the file has downloaded onto your desktop, run it to install the reader on your hard drive.