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The demographic dividend is more than an education dividend

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  • Kotschy, Rainer
  • Urtaza, Patricio Suarez
  • Sunde, Uwe

Abstract

The demographic dividend has long been viewed as an important factor for economic development and provided a rationale for policies aiming at a more balanced age structure through birth control and family planning. Assessing the relative importance of age structure and increases in human capital, recent work has argued that the demographic dividend is related to education and has suggested a dominance of improving education over age structure. Here we reconsider the empirical relevance of shifts in the age distribution for development for a panel of 159 countries over the period 1950 to 2015. Based on a flexible model of age-structured human capital endowments, the results document important interactions between age structure and human capital endowments, suggesting that arguments of clear dominance of education over age structure are unwarranted and lead to potentially misleading policy conclusions. An increase in the working-age population share has a strong and significant positive effect on growth, even conditional on human capital, in line with the conventional notion of a demographic dividend. An increase in human capital only has positive growth effects if combined with a suitable age structure. An increasing share of the most productive age groups has an additional positive effect on economic performance. Finally, the results show considerable heterogeneity in the effect of age structure and human capital for different levels of development. Successful policies for sustainable development should take this heterogeneity into account to avoid detrimental implications of a unidimensional focus on human capital without accounting for demography.

Suggested Citation

  • Kotschy, Rainer & Urtaza, Patricio Suarez & Sunde, Uwe, 2020. "The demographic dividend is more than an education dividend," Munich Reprints in Economics 84765, University of Munich, Department of Economics.
  • Handle: RePEc:lmu:muenar:84765
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    Cited by:

    1. Bloom, David E. & Canning, David & Kotschy, Rainer & Prettner, Klaus & Schünemann, Johannes, 2018. "Health and Economic Growth: Reconciling the Micro and Macro Evidence," IZA Discussion Papers 11940, Institute of Labor Economics (IZA).
    2. Meng, Xin, 2023. "China's 40 Years Demographic Dividend and Labor Supply: The Quantity Myth," IZA Discussion Papers 16207, Institute of Labor Economics (IZA).
    3. Jian Zhou & Jingjing Deng & Li Li & Shuang Wang, 2023. "The Demographic Dividend or the Education Dividend? Evidence from China’s Economic Growth," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 15(9), pages 1-17, April.
    4. Bloom, David E. & Canning, David & Kotschy, Rainer & Prettner, Klaus & Schünemann, Johannes, 2024. "Health and economic growth: Reconciling the micro and macro evidence," World Development, Elsevier, vol. 178(C).
    5. Frank Götmark & Malte Andersson, 2023. "Achieving sustainable population: Fertility decline in many developing countries follows modern contraception, not economic growth," Sustainable Development, John Wiley & Sons, Ltd., vol. 31(3), pages 1606-1617, June.
    6. Guillaume Marois & Ekaterina Zhelenkova & Balhasan Ali, 2022. "Labour Force Projections in India Until 2060 and Implications for the Demographic Dividend," Social Indicators Research: An International and Interdisciplinary Journal for Quality-of-Life Measurement, Springer, vol. 164(1), pages 477-497, November.
    7. Grażyna Chaberek & Julia Ziółkowska, 2022. "City Corporation Activities for Creating Sustainable Population Development in the Opinion of University Students in Gdansk (Poland)," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 14(18), pages 1-13, September.
    8. Joan C. Micó, 2022. "A Population Pyramid Dynamics Model and Its Analytical Solution. Application Case for Spain," Mathematics, MDPI, vol. 10(19), pages 1-20, September.

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