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      Global Human Capital: Integrating Education and Population

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      Science
      American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

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          Abstract

          Almost universally, women with higher levels of education have fewer children. Better education is associated with lower mortality, better health, and different migration patterns. Hence, the global population outlook depends greatly on further progress in education, particularly of young women. By 2050, the highest and lowest education scenarios--assuming identical education-specific fertility rates--result in world population sizes of 8.9 and 10.0 billion, respectively. Better education also matters for human development, including health, economic growth, and democracy. Existing methods of multi-state demography can quantitatively integrate education into standard demographic analysis, thus adding the "quality" dimension.

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          Most cited references21

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          Some Social Requisites of Democracy: Economic Development and Political Legitimacy

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Science
                Science
                American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
                0036-8075
                1095-9203
                July 28 2011
                July 29 2011
                July 28 2011
                July 29 2011
                : 333
                : 6042
                : 587-592
                Article
                10.1126/science.1206964
                21798940
                c9573547-9383-4a26-80d7-2ca6327d366f
                © 2011
                History

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