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Demographic economics

Demographic economics or population economics is the application of economic analysis to demography, the study of human populations, including size, growth, density, distribution, and vital statistics.[1][2]

marriage and [1][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10]

fertility

divorce[19][20]

[18]

[21] and life expectancy/mortality[22][23][24]

morbidity

[1][3][25][26][27]

dependency ratios

migration[29][30]

[28]

population size[40][41]

[39]

the from "population explosion" to (dynamic) stability[49] or decline.[50][51][52]

demographic transition

Aspects of the subject include:


Other subfields include measuring value of life[53][54] and the economics of the elderly[55][56][57] and the handicapped[58][59][60] and of gender,[61][62][63] race, minorities, and non-labor discrimination.[64][65] In coverage and subfields, it complements labor economics[66][67] and implicates a variety of other economics subjects.[68][69][70]

Cost of raising a child

Family economics

Generational accounting

Growth economics

international comparison

Retirement age

Related:

John Eatwell, Murray Milgate, and Peter Newman, ed. ( 1989. Social Economics: The New Palgrave, pp. v-vi. Arrow-page searchable links to entries for:

[1987]

Demography

Scope and links to issue contents & abstracts.

Journal of Population Economics – and 20th Anniversary statement, 2006.

Aims and scope

Population and Development Review

Aims and abstract & supplement links.

Population Bulletin – Each issue on a

current population topic.

Population Studies

Aims and scope.

Review of Economics of the Household