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要 旨
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This paper employs an overlapping generations model to analyze how placing
the burden of caring for both elderly parents and children on the working generation
shapes fertility and other economic outcomes. In themodel, fertility decisions
create intergenerational spillovers. When one generation has fewer children, the
next generation faces a heavier caregiving burden for its elderly parents, which
in turn discourages childbearing. The model reveals sharply different long-run
trajectories depending on the time intensity of caregiving. If care demands are
moderate, sustainable growth remains feasible despite these externalities. However,
when care becomes highly time-intensive, fertility declines, labor supply contracts,
and the economy risks falling into a “nursing hell,” where most time is devoted
to caregiving. Policy measures, such as child allowances, can alleviate this
dynamic by expanding the number of siblings and reducing the per-capita caregiving
burden. Yet if care demands are extremely high from the outset, even such
interventions cannot avert structural collapse.
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