We present new data documenting the secular decline in fertility in the states of the United States, the dramatic convergence in fertility, child schooling, parental schooling, survival probabilities. In addition we document the disparate nature of the Baby Boom in the United States. There were two different regimes, a large Baby Boom and a Small Baby Boom. The large Baby Boom regions also had the smallest increase in child schooling, whereas the small Baby Boom regions had the largest increase in child schooling. We present suggestive evidence that falling mortality risk is strongly positively correlated with falling fertility, rising education levels of parents is strongly negatively related to fetility, and that population density is...
Fertility decline in human populations is an inherent evolutionary puzzle with major demographic, so...
The rapid population growth in developing countries in the middle of the 20th century led to fears o...
In this data snapshot, Carsey Senior Demographer Kenneth Johnson reports that National Center for He...
We present new data documenting the secular decline in fertility in the states of the United States,...
We present new data on fertility, schooling, and child survival in fertility in the United States be...
We present a model capable of explaining 200 years of declining fertility, 200 years of rising educa...
From 1958 to 2021, fertility rates in the United States have declined from 3.5 births per woman to 1...
This paper analyzes qualitatively and quantitatively the e ects of declining mortality rates on fert...
Abstract U.S. fertility rose from a low of 2.27 children for women born in 1908 to a peak of 3.21 ch...
The large declines in total fertility rates that have occurred in many low income countries since 19...
It is the main purpose of this paper to examine in detail the pattern of fertility fluctuations in t...
Fertility decline in human populations is an inherent evolutionary puzzle with major demographic, so...
Fertility rates have been declining worldwide over the past fifty years, part of a phenomenon known ...
My new theory of the economic determinants of fertility is that greater human capital induces parent...
The United States fertility rate declined sharply during the Great Recession that lasted from 2007-2...
Fertility decline in human populations is an inherent evolutionary puzzle with major demographic, so...
The rapid population growth in developing countries in the middle of the 20th century led to fears o...
In this data snapshot, Carsey Senior Demographer Kenneth Johnson reports that National Center for He...
We present new data documenting the secular decline in fertility in the states of the United States,...
We present new data on fertility, schooling, and child survival in fertility in the United States be...
We present a model capable of explaining 200 years of declining fertility, 200 years of rising educa...
From 1958 to 2021, fertility rates in the United States have declined from 3.5 births per woman to 1...
This paper analyzes qualitatively and quantitatively the e ects of declining mortality rates on fert...
Abstract U.S. fertility rose from a low of 2.27 children for women born in 1908 to a peak of 3.21 ch...
The large declines in total fertility rates that have occurred in many low income countries since 19...
It is the main purpose of this paper to examine in detail the pattern of fertility fluctuations in t...
Fertility decline in human populations is an inherent evolutionary puzzle with major demographic, so...
Fertility rates have been declining worldwide over the past fifty years, part of a phenomenon known ...
My new theory of the economic determinants of fertility is that greater human capital induces parent...
The United States fertility rate declined sharply during the Great Recession that lasted from 2007-2...
Fertility decline in human populations is an inherent evolutionary puzzle with major demographic, so...
The rapid population growth in developing countries in the middle of the 20th century led to fears o...
In this data snapshot, Carsey Senior Demographer Kenneth Johnson reports that National Center for He...