Type | Working Paper - NBER Working Paper |
Title | Sex ratios and savings rates: Evidence from ‘excess men’in China |
Author(s) | |
Volume | 15093 |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2009 |
URL | http://papers.economics.ubc.ca/legacypapers/wei.pdf |
Abstract | High savings rates in many countries are a major factor in the global current account imbalances. The Chinese savings rate has been high and rising, contributing to one of the world’s largest and fast-growing current account surpluses. The life cycle theory and precautionary savings motive, in spite of their popularity, are not compatible with recent time series patterns. The paper tests a new hypothesis based on a biological savings motive: a high and rising sex ratio imbalance, by increasing the competition by men in the marriage market, may have induced the Chinese to postpone consumption significantly in favor of wealth accumulation. We report both “macro” and “micro” evidence in support of the hypothesis. First, across provinces, local saving rates are found to be strongly positively associated with local sex ratio imbalances, after accounting for demographics, social safety net and other factors. The relationship continues to hold with an instrumental variable approach. Second, across households, those with a son tend to save more in regions with a more skewed sex ratio, holding constant other household features. The rise in sex ratio imbalance can potentially account for half of the actual increase in household savings in the recent decade. |
» | China - National Population Census 1990 |