The early-1970s abortion legalization led to a significant drop in fertility. We investigate whether this decline represented a delay in births or a permanent reduction in fertility. We combine Census and Vital Statistics data to compare the lifetime fertility of women born in early-legalizing states, whose peak childbearing years occurred in the early 1970s, to that of women from other states and cohorts. We find that much of the reduction was permanent, in that women did not compensate by having more children later, and that it largely reflects an increased share of women remaining childless throughout their fertile years
I evaluate the effects of regulations that limit the availability of abortion services, as well as t...
Copyright © 2004 by the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public HealthThe period total first aborti...
In this paper, I evaluate the effects of regulations that limit the availability of abortion service...
We consider the effect of abortion legalization on births in the United States. A simple theoretical...
We evaluate the short- and long-term effects for women of access to subsidized, legal abortion by ex...
In 1975-79, U.S. women childless at age 30 had low fertility after age 30. Under age- and parity-spe...
CONTEXT: Pregnant women and children's eligibility for Medicaid was expanded dramatically durin...
Over the past decade, conservative states in the US have passed a wide array of laws restricting abo...
The worldwide birth rate has been in steady decline over the past 50 years. Many factors may influen...
Abortion rates rose following the expanded legalization of abortion by the Supreme Court decision in...
Theory suggests that abortion restrictions will influence fertility outcomes such as pregnancy, abor...
Donohue and Levitt (2001) attribute over half of the decline in U.S. crime rates during the 1990s to...
Abstract: In this paper we estimate the impact on adolescent childbearing of the liberalization of t...
Abortion legalization was one of the most important changes in social policy of the 20 th century. P...
Abortion legalization in the early 1970s led to dramatic changes in fertility. Some research has sug...
I evaluate the effects of regulations that limit the availability of abortion services, as well as t...
Copyright © 2004 by the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public HealthThe period total first aborti...
In this paper, I evaluate the effects of regulations that limit the availability of abortion service...
We consider the effect of abortion legalization on births in the United States. A simple theoretical...
We evaluate the short- and long-term effects for women of access to subsidized, legal abortion by ex...
In 1975-79, U.S. women childless at age 30 had low fertility after age 30. Under age- and parity-spe...
CONTEXT: Pregnant women and children's eligibility for Medicaid was expanded dramatically durin...
Over the past decade, conservative states in the US have passed a wide array of laws restricting abo...
The worldwide birth rate has been in steady decline over the past 50 years. Many factors may influen...
Abortion rates rose following the expanded legalization of abortion by the Supreme Court decision in...
Theory suggests that abortion restrictions will influence fertility outcomes such as pregnancy, abor...
Donohue and Levitt (2001) attribute over half of the decline in U.S. crime rates during the 1990s to...
Abstract: In this paper we estimate the impact on adolescent childbearing of the liberalization of t...
Abortion legalization was one of the most important changes in social policy of the 20 th century. P...
Abortion legalization in the early 1970s led to dramatic changes in fertility. Some research has sug...
I evaluate the effects of regulations that limit the availability of abortion services, as well as t...
Copyright © 2004 by the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public HealthThe period total first aborti...
In this paper, I evaluate the effects of regulations that limit the availability of abortion service...