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Title: Raising Dragons

Citation Type: Working Paper

Publication Year: 2014

Abstract: We study why China suddenly exhibited a large surge in births -- a 50% increase in 2000 relative to 1999 -- in the 2000 Year of the Dragon by disaggregating birth rates at the city level. We define the dragon effect as a relative jump in birth rates compared to the trend. Prior to 2000, Asian nations with large numbers of ethnic Chinese -- but not China -- exhibited strong dragon year effects. We exploit the uneven economic growth of regions in China to understand the emergence of the dragon effect. We find that the dragon effect was most pronounced in rapidly developing cities having higher incomes, higher average education, and greater employment prospects as proxied by the share of non-local residents. Our main findings at the city level are supported by our micro-level analysis, where we show the dragon effect to be strongly correlated with educational attainment of family members and membership in a multi-generational household.

Url: https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2544270

User Submitted?: No

Authors: Nye, John, V; Meng Xue, Melanie

Series Title: GMU Working Paper in Economics

Publication Number: 15-18

Institution: George Mason University

Pages: 29

Publisher Location:

Data Collections: IPUMS International

Topics: Fertility and Mortality

Countries: China

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