Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 June 2019
We develop an overlapping generations model to study how the interplay between social and human capital affects fertility. In a framework where families face a trade-off between the quantity and quality of children, we incorporate the assumption that social capital plays a key role in the accumulation of human capital. We show how the erosion of social capital can trigger a chain of reactions leading households to base their childbearing decisions on quantity, instead of quality, resulting in higher fertility.
We are grateful to two anonymous reviewers whose suggestions helped to substantially improve the paper. The paper also benefited from comments by participants at the 1st CICSE Workshop—10th Nonlinear Economic Dynamics (NED) Conference “Economic Dynamics, Economic Growth and Development”, Pisa, 7–9 September 2017. Usual caveats apply.