Pakistan Development Review, Volume 16, Issues 1-3Pakistan Institute of Development Economics, 1977 - Pakistan |
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Page 94
Wife's education is assumed to reflect the value of her time and thus , the more
educated is a wife , the more costly are children and the lower is completed
fertility . The two rural variables are included to capture the differences in food
and ...
Wife's education is assumed to reflect the value of her time and thus , the more
educated is a wife , the more costly are children and the lower is completed
fertility . The two rural variables are included to capture the differences in food
and ...
Page 184
Finally , the time trend is included as a proxy for the changes in the level of
information in the farm sector and farmers ' experience in the use of fertilizer over
the years . The parameters were estimated by the method of Ordinary Least
Squares .
Finally , the time trend is included as a proxy for the changes in the level of
information in the farm sector and farmers ' experience in the use of fertilizer over
the years . The parameters were estimated by the method of Ordinary Least
Squares .
Page 317
In the specification for Eq . 1 , wife's age has been included as an explanatory
variable , but not in the appropriate functional form . In a sense , we have omitted
the variable " wife's age squared ” and it is the correlation of the log of family ...
In the specification for Eq . 1 , wife's age has been included as an explanatory
variable , but not in the appropriate functional form . In a sense , we have omitted
the variable " wife's age squared ” and it is the correlation of the log of family ...
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Contents
Table | 13 |
A Simple Optimisation Model for Cotton Processing Activities | 17 |
An Urban Poverty Line Estimate | 49 |
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Common terms and phrases
additional adjusted age of marriage agricultural analysis areas assistance assumed assumption average Bangladesh basic births calculated capital changes child cloth coarse constraints consumption cost cotton couples deaths demand for contraception dependent desired determine developing countries discussion domestic earnings Economic educational level effect employment estimates exchange rate expected expenditure export factors fertility Figure foreign function given growth higher import substitution important included income increase indices industry Institute interest investment less living children lower major measure mortality needs Note number of living objective Pakistan parity percent period Planning population possible present problem production proportion ratio regression relative Report Research respectively returns rural savings social solutions Statistical Survey Table tion trade unit University urban variable wife wives yarn