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Does Life Expectancy Affect Private Educational Investment in China?
Author(s) -
Sun Wenkai,
Wang Xiaoxia,
Ying Xiaoni
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
china and world economy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.815
H-Index - 28
eISSN - 1749-124X
pISSN - 1671-2234
DOI - 10.1111/j.1749-124x.2012.01294.x
Subject(s) - life expectancy , functional illiteracy , human capital , investment (military) , china , demographic economics , empirical research , economics , population , empirical evidence , population ageing , affect (linguistics) , educational attainment , labour economics , economic growth , demography , psychology , political science , sociology , philosophy , communication , epistemology , politics , law
In this paper, we emphasize the interactive effect between life expectancy and human capital accumulation, and test the positive feedback of longevity to educational investment in China. This is very important for understanding the pressure from the aging population and the increase in private educational investment in China. We first show in an extended human capital investment model that life expectancy growth acts as a driving force for educational investment. We then build a difference‐in‐difference‐in‐differences empirical framework and use cross‐province data to examine the effect in China. We use the maternal mortality rate (MMR) to identify the difference in life expectancy between genders, and the illiteracy rate or average years of education by gender for educational investment. The empirical results comply with the theory, in that increases in life expectancy significantly lower illiteracy rates and improve the average schooling years in China. This content of the present paper is closely related to crucial issues like population aging, human capital accumulation and gender discrimination. Policy implications are discussed based on the empirical results.