Re: fertility and government

2003-07-18 Thread Wei Dai
On Tue, Jul 15, 2003 at 07:04:27PM -0400, Robert A. Book wrote:
 [...]  The point
 I was tryign to make is that it's possible for a dictatorship to
 depress child-rearing opportunities less than other opportunities,
 thus making child-rearing relatively more attractive.

Why do you think dictatorships tend to depress people's non-child-rearing
opportunities more than their child-rearing opportunities? Note that this
is a matter of choice for the government. Certainly dictators can choose
to depress people's child-rearing opportunities very heavily if they want
to. Just look at China's one-child policy.

The article said average GDP growth in dictatorships is faster
than in democracies because of higher fertility, meaning this
depression of opportunities is actually causing the total wealth of the
country (including human capital) to grow faster, which doesn't seem very 
plausible.

I think maybe the answer is that a dictator has an economic incentive to
maximize total GDP, while a voter has an incentive to maximize per capita
GDP instead. The dictator owns all government revenue, which is directly
related to total GDP. The voter has only a proportional claim to
government revenue. The more people there are, the greater the GDP and
government revenue, but also the more people he has to share it with, so
he only cares about per capita GDP. Perhaps the difference in fertility 
reflect perfectly rational policy decisions made by those in control of 
governments.

I'm curious if anyone is aware of an instance, where a conscious,
explicit choice was made in government policy to choose higher total GDP
over higher per capita GDP, or vice versa.



Re: fertility and government

2003-07-18 Thread John Morrow

I'm curious if anyone is aware of an instance, where a conscious,
explicit choice was made in government policy to choose higher total GDP
over higher per capita GDP, or vice versa.
It seems to me that most any policy restricting immigration is choosing to 
maximize per capita GDP over total GDP and has that more or less in mind, 
which also goes along the lines of the voting bodies preference of higher 
per capita GDP.





Re: fertility and government

2003-07-15 Thread Susan Hogarth
Quoting Wei Dai [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 According to a recent article [1] in Harvard International Review, because
 of differences in fertility, the population growth rate in dictatorships
 is higher than that in democracies at every income level. It says an
 average woman has one-half of a child more under dictatorship than under
 democracy. As a result of this faster population growth, dictatorships
 have greater GDP growth even though they have lower per capita GDP growth
 compared to democracies.
 
 This information leads me to ask a couple of questions:
 
 1. Why is fertility higher in dictatorships? Do dictators like bigger
 populations, and democrats like smaller populations? Does population
 growth influence choice of government? Or is there a third factor that
 affects both fertility and form of government?

What is the taxation burden in dictatorships versus democracies? I wonder if 
that shows a better correlation with fertility than government form.

-- 
Susan Hogarth
If we cannot adjust our differences peacefully we are less than human.
 - F. Herbert



Re: fertility and government

2003-07-15 Thread Robert A. Book
   But in a dictatorship, while my
  child-rearing opportunities suffer, my business opportunities suffer
  even more.
 
 But what if you live under a capitalist dicatator, like Chile's General
 Pinochet or South Korea's General Park [is this name right?]?


If my understanding is correct, in a lot of those places you have to
know someone to take advantage of the capitalism.  There are
probably not enough such people to change the data, in any
(reasonable) income bracket.

Even if that's not the case, business opportunities is just an
example.  Substitute political opportunities if you like.  The point
I was tryign to make is that it's possible for a dictatorship to
depress child-rearing opportunities less than other opportunities,
thus making child-rearing relatively more attractive.


   I was under the impression that
  fertility in the USSR and the Warsaw pact countries was very low, and
  I think it's still very low in Russia.
 
 Yes.  In fact, it's even lower since Russia and other Warsaw bloc countries
 adopted democracy than when they were ruled by Communist dictators!


Perhaps -- but calling Russia's current form of government democracy
is stretching a bit.  They're closer than they were in 1991 to be
sure, but right now I think oligarchy would be more accurate.



--Robert



Re: fertility and government

2003-07-14 Thread fabio guillermo rojas

 1. Why is fertility higher in dictatorships? Do dictators like bigger
 populations, and democrats like smaller populations? Does population
 growth influence choice of government? Or is there a third factor that
 affects both fertility and form of government?

The question should be: what causes dictatorship and do these conditions
encourage high fertility? Well, we have a lot of data and research on both
questions. Financially stable nations with democratic institutions tend
not to succumb to dictatorships, while nations that explicitly reject 
capitalism tend to evolve into dictatorships. Ok - what causes high
fertility? Low wealth, low education and no access to birth control. 
The nations at risk for dictatorship probably are poor and do not have
good mass education. Fabio 




Re: fertility and government

2003-07-14 Thread AdmrlLocke

In a message dated 7/14/03 6:45:42 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

1. Why is fertility higher in dictatorships? Do dictators like bigger
populations, and democrats like smaller populations? Does population
growth influence choice of government? Or is there a third factor that
affects both fertility and form of government?

It may be that oppressed people turn to sex (and alcohol, etc.) more as a way 
of easing the pain of oppression.



Re: fertility and government

2003-07-14 Thread Marko Paunovic
I haven't read the article, so everything that follows is speculation.

I don't believe that historical evidence supports this claim. For example,
former communist countries did not have high rates of population growth. I
don't know the numbers for Fascist Countries, but I don't think that the
rates were too high.

I believe that more variation in population growth could be explained by
looking at dominant religion than by looking at the form of government. Of
course, there is some correlation between dominant religion and the form of
government, which may lead to the conclusion that form of government and
population growth are correlated.

- Original Message -
From: Wei Dai [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, July 14, 2003 17:49 PM
Subject: fertility and government


 According to a recent article [1] in Harvard International Review, because
 of differences in fertility, the population growth rate in dictatorships
 is higher than that in democracies at every income level. It says an
 average woman has one-half of a child more under dictatorship than under
 democracy. As a result of this faster population growth, dictatorships
 have greater GDP growth even though they have lower per capita GDP growth
 compared to democracies.

 This information leads me to ask a couple of questions:

 1. Why is fertility higher in dictatorships? Do dictators like bigger
 populations, and democrats like smaller populations? Does population
 growth influence choice of government? Or is there a third factor that
 affects both fertility and form of government?

 2. Should economists try to maximize GDP, or per capita GDP? If the former
 should they be supporting dictatorships?

 Another interesting piece of information in this article is that
 democratic regimes are more frequent in more developed countries, but it's
 not because those countries are more likely to become democracies. Rather
 it's because they are less likely to revert back to dictatorships. Among
 democracies that have collapsed, the one with the highest per capita
 income is Argentina in 1975 -- US$6055.

 [1] A Flawed Blueprint. By: Przeworksi, Adam. Harvard International
 Review, Spring2003, Vol. 25 Issue 1, p42.




Re: fertility and government

2003-07-14 Thread Sampo Syreeni
On 2003-07-14, Wei Dai uttered:

1. Why is fertility higher in dictatorships? Do dictators like bigger
populations, and democrats like smaller populations?

Maybe they're poorer in aggregate? I mean, sustenance-level poverty is one
of the prime causal precedents of high fertility, and most dictatorships
are poor ones, because of ineffective rule of law and wide-spread
corruption.

Sure, there are a few wealthy dictatorships (Saudi Arabia comes to mind),
but that's because of independent factors (which usually do not touch the
entire population).

Does population growth influence choice of government?

Under extreme poverty, likely not -- poverty would drive people to take
care of their own business, not politics. Under other conditions, probably
yes -- relative poverty and the greed thereoff is how we got the welfare
state. We would expect the per capita lack of income in young generations
induced by population growth to affect at least redistributive policy. For
example, I wouldn't be surprised if that was the precise description of
how politics in India works right now.

If the latter hypothesis pans out, we have to be real grateful that
industrialisation proceeded so rapidly in the West, unhindered by
full-grown democracy. Otherwise we never would have tunneled onto the
level of wealth which throttles population growth, without bumping into a
democratic political wall with the working class requiring income
transfers -- the latter slows growth, so we could well have become stuck
in between.

2. Should economists try to maximize GDP, or per capita GDP?

Neither, I think. Maximizing GDP would not be conducive to general
welfare. Maximizing per capita GDP today would also violate individual
choice, if we also take into account individuals' time preferences. I
would take full heed of the principle of revealed preference, and just let
people choose.

Another interesting piece of information in this article is that
democratic regimes are more frequent in more developed countries, but
it's not because those countries are more likely to become democracies.
Rather it's because they are less likely to revert back to dictatorships.
Among democracies that have collapsed, the one with the highest per
capita income is Argentina in 1975 -- US$6055.

I would side with Robert Kaplan
(http://www.theatlantic.com/issues/97dec/democ.htm) and conjecture that
democracy can only survive in a relatively homogeneous population,
constrained by the rule of law. Secondarily I would claim that democracy
can only survive where its transaction costs and the steadily increasing
dead weight it produces can be absorbed by economic growth. Such
conditions seem to sweep most of the unsuccessful democracies from the
picture.

They might sweep us under the rug as well. The conjecture might be false,
but at least it supplies some basis for the claim that growth is
necessary (which it of course isn't in any purely economic framework).
-- 
Sampo Syreeni, aka decoy - mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED], tel:+358-50-5756111
student/math+cs/helsinki university, http://www.iki.fi/~decoy/front
openpgp: 050985C2/025E D175 ABE5 027C 9494 EEB0 E090 8BA9 0509 85C2



Re: fertility and government

2003-07-14 Thread Wei Dai
A few people seem to have skipped over the first sentence of my post.  
The article said that fertility rate is higher in dictatorships than in
democracies at *all income levels*. Meaning if you take any income level
and compare dictatorships and democracies in the same level, the
dictatorships will tend to have a higher fertility rate.

I've placed a copy of the article at
http://www.ibiblio.org/weidai/przeworski.pdf. Unfortunately it does not
have a bibliography which makes it hard to determine how the numbers it
cites were calculated.