212 research outputs found
Fertility and early-life mortality: Evidence from smallpox vaccination in Sweden
We examine how the introduction of smallpox vaccination affected early-life mortality and fertility in Sweden during the first half of the 19th century. We demonstrate that parishes in counties with higher levels of smallpox mortality prior to the introduction of vaccination experienced a greater decline in infant mortality afterwards. Exploiting this finding in an instrumental-variable approach reveals that this decline had a negative effect on the birth rate, while the number of surviving children and population growth remained unaffected. These results suggest that the decline in early-life mortality cannot account for the onset of the fertility decline in Sweden
Fertility and early-life mortality: Evidence from smallpox vaccination in Sweden
We examine how the introduction of smallpox vaccination affected early-life mortality and fertility in Sweden during the first half of the 19th century. We demonstrate that parishes in counties with higher levels of smallpox mortality prior to the introduction of vaccination experienced a greater decline in infant mortality afterwards. Exploiting this finding in an instrumental-variable approach reveals that this decline had a negative effect on the birth rate, while the number of surviving children and population growth remained unaffected. These results suggest that the decline in early-life mortality cannot account for the onset of the fertility decline in Sweden
How the other half died: immigration and mortality in US cities
Fears of immigrants as a threat to public health have a long and sordid history. At the turn of the
20th century, when immigrants made up one-third of the population in crowded American cities,
contemporaries blamed high urban mortality rates on the newest arrivals. We evaluate how the
implementation of country-specific immigration quotas in the 1920s affected urban health. Cities
with larger quota-induced reductions in immigration experienced a persistent decline in mortality
rates, driven by a reduction in deaths from infectious diseases. The unfavorable living conditions
immigrants endured explains the majority of the effect as quotas reduced residential crowding and
mortality declines were largest in cities where immigrants resided in more crowded conditions and
where public health resources were stretched thinnest.First author draf
QoRTs: a comprehensive toolset for quality control and data processing of RNA-Seq experiments
Labour Force Participation and Employment of Humanitarian Migrants: Evidence from the Building a New Life in Australia Longitudinal Data
This study uses the longitudinal data from the Building a New Life in Australia survey to examine the relationships between human capital and labour market participation and employment status among recently arrived/approved humanitarian migrants. It includes attention to the heterogeneity of labour force participation and employment status across genders and also migration pathways. We find that the likelihood of participating in the labour force is higher for those who had preimmigration paid job experience, completed study/job training and have job searching knowledge/skills in Australia and possess higher proficiency in spoken English. We find that the chance of getting a paid job is negatively related to having better pre-immigration education, but it is positively related to having unpaid work experience and job searching skills in Australia, and better health
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