@techreport{69275d1215824dc2a23958c4b3a150ee,
title = "Endogenous Depopulation and Economic Growth",
abstract = "Fertility rates have declined dramatically across almost all high-income countries over the past decades. This has raised concerns about future economic prospects. Indeed, fully– and semi–endogenous growth models imply that a shrinking workforce would lead to declining income growth and perhaps even stagnation. We extend the previous analyses to explicitly incorporate an endogenous quantity/quality trade-off between fertility and human capital accumulation. This allows us to assess the extent to which a declining number of workers can be compensated by increasing education. Our analysis demonstrates that economic growth needs not necessarily to decline with a falling population. Under certain conditions, human capital investment can sustain technological progress and economic growth despite the demographic challenges we are facing.",
keywords = "Demographic Change, Fertility Decline, Economic Growth, Research and Development, Endogenous Fertility, Endogenous Education, Human Capital Accumulation",
author = "Alberto Bucci and Klaus Prettner",
year = "2025",
month = apr,
doi = "10.57938/69275d12-1582-4dc2-a239-58c4b3a150ee",
language = "English",
series = "Department of Economics Working Paper Series",
number = "377",
publisher = "WU Vienna University of Economics and Business",
address = "Austria",
type = "WorkingPaper",
institution = "WU Vienna University of Economics and Business",
}