Sex discrimination starts before sex is assigned at birth?!
16 Nov 2019 Leave a comment
in development economics, discrimination, economic history, economics of love and marriage, gender, growth disasters, growth miracles, health economics, law and economics Tags: abortion law reform, China, India, one child policy, political correctness
Shock, horror! Chinese government statistics are unreliable
14 Apr 2017 Leave a comment
in development economics, population economics Tags: China, communist party, economics of fertility, one child policy, Population demographics
My Chinese friends at a Japanese university in 1995 must have been born in the 1970s at the height of the one child policy but always had a younger brother if the first child was female.
The way to tell whether the Chinese student was the daughter of a party member was to ask if they had any brothers or sisters.
Without one-child policy, China still might not see baby boom, gender balance
20 May 2016 Leave a comment
Peak China
20 Nov 2015 Leave a comment
in development economics, population economics Tags: China, offsetting behaviour, one child policy, The fatal conceit, The pretence to knowledge, unintended consequences
The western environmental movement’s role in China’s one-child policy
19 Nov 2015 Leave a comment
in development economics, environmental economics, environmentalism, growth disasters, growth miracles, health economics, labour economics, labour supply, population economics Tags: China, cranks, doomsday profits, doomsday prophecies, one child policy
Chinese birth and death rates and the Chinese population since 1950
04 Nov 2015 Leave a comment
in development economics, growth disasters, growth miracles, labour economics, labour supply, population economics Tags: China, economics of fertility, one child policy, The fatal conceit, The pretense to knowledge, unintended consequences
Chinese and Hong Kong fertility since the one child policy was adopted
01 Nov 2015 Leave a comment
in development economics, growth disasters, growth miracles, Marxist economics, population economics Tags: China, economics of fertility, Hong Kong, one child policy, The fatal conceit, The pretense to knowledge
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