Status externalities and low birth rates in Korea
Status externalities and low birth rates in Korea
East Asians, especially South Koreans, appear to be preoccupied with their offspring's education---most children spend time in expensive private institutes and in cram schools in the evenings and on weekends. At the same time, South Korea currently has the lowest total fertility rate in the world. In this paper, we propose a theory with status externalities and endogenous fertility that connects these two facts. Using a quantitative heterogeneous-agent model calibrated to Korea, we find that fertility would be 16% higher in the absence of the status externality. Furthermore, childlessness in the poorest quintile would fall from five to less than one percent. We then explore the effects of various government policies. A pro-natal transfer increases fertility and reduces education while an education tax reduces both education and fertility, with heterogeneous effects across the income distribution. The policy mix that maximizes the current generation's welfare consists of an education tax of 12% and moderate pro-natal transfers---a monthly child allowance of 3% of average income for 18 years. This would raise average fertility by about 5% and decrease education spending by 16%. Although this policy increases the welfare of the current generation, it may not do the same for future generations as it lowers their human capital
Centre for Economic Policy Research
Kim, Seongeun
58a7b85d-5d3b-45c7-9881-5cdda62deaaa
Tertilt, Michèle
cb0fab5d-a76e-497a-baa2-e43f9dd2ab27
Yum, Minchul
23e96e8e-0dbd-4b6a-b3d1-538ab7d008b4
16 June 2021
Kim, Seongeun
58a7b85d-5d3b-45c7-9881-5cdda62deaaa
Tertilt, Michèle
cb0fab5d-a76e-497a-baa2-e43f9dd2ab27
Yum, Minchul
23e96e8e-0dbd-4b6a-b3d1-538ab7d008b4
Kim, Seongeun, Tertilt, Michèle and Yum, Minchul
(2021)
Status externalities and low birth rates in Korea
(CEPR Press Discussion Paper, DP16271)
Centre for Economic Policy Research
Record type:
Monograph
(Discussion Paper)
Abstract
East Asians, especially South Koreans, appear to be preoccupied with their offspring's education---most children spend time in expensive private institutes and in cram schools in the evenings and on weekends. At the same time, South Korea currently has the lowest total fertility rate in the world. In this paper, we propose a theory with status externalities and endogenous fertility that connects these two facts. Using a quantitative heterogeneous-agent model calibrated to Korea, we find that fertility would be 16% higher in the absence of the status externality. Furthermore, childlessness in the poorest quintile would fall from five to less than one percent. We then explore the effects of various government policies. A pro-natal transfer increases fertility and reduces education while an education tax reduces both education and fertility, with heterogeneous effects across the income distribution. The policy mix that maximizes the current generation's welfare consists of an education tax of 12% and moderate pro-natal transfers---a monthly child allowance of 3% of average income for 18 years. This would raise average fertility by about 5% and decrease education spending by 16%. Although this policy increases the welfare of the current generation, it may not do the same for future generations as it lowers their human capital
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Published date: 16 June 2021
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Local EPrints ID: 474061
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/474061
PURE UUID: 33598fd9-54ca-40f9-aa87-c819b644e86d
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Date deposited: 10 Feb 2023 17:32
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:18
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Contributors
Author:
Seongeun Kim
Author:
Michèle Tertilt
Author:
Minchul Yum
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