I shift, stretch, and transform the observed cohort age-schedule of first birth for Danish women born in 1963 to see how late the mean age at first birth could plausibly shift. Constraints of two kinds are placed on the ultimate distribution of first births. First, no more than one-third of first births can occur after age 35. This constraint allows postponement without radical changes in childlessness or parity distribution. Second, I preserve some variability in the age at first birth by keeping the standard deviation of first birth above 4 years, the minimum value observed for Denmark during the baby boom years. Under these constraints, I find that mean ages at first birth of at least 33 years are plausible. This would represent a furthe...
Background: This article questions the demographic consequences of birth postponement in Europe. ...
Fertility differences in Europe are largely due to disparities in parity progression after the first...
Several studies have shown that at the individual level there exists a negative relationship between...
I shift, stretch, and transform the observed cohort age-schedule of first birth for Danish women bor...
Postponing the start of childbearing raises the question of fertility postponed versus fertility for...
In high-income countries, women and men born since the 1940s have delayed the birth of their first c...
In high-income countries, women and men born since the 1940s have delayed the birth of their first c...
This paper examines the dispersion of fertility across age and time which has rarely beenstudied. Us...
The last two decades of the XX century have witnessed a steep increase in childbearing age all over ...
Two decades after Aleš Hrdlička’s death the introduction of effective contraceptives broke the evolu...
In this contribution postponement behaviour will mainly be seen on the macro-level. One of the main ...
This paper questions the demographic consequences of birth postponement in Europe. Starting from the...
Previous studies have documented an increasing heterogeneity in first-birth timing in countries expe...
Increasing age at first childbirth has been suggested to increase the risk for infertility. Our obje...
This is the first paper that documents that school entry cut-off date affects the timing of births. ...
Background: This article questions the demographic consequences of birth postponement in Europe. ...
Fertility differences in Europe are largely due to disparities in parity progression after the first...
Several studies have shown that at the individual level there exists a negative relationship between...
I shift, stretch, and transform the observed cohort age-schedule of first birth for Danish women bor...
Postponing the start of childbearing raises the question of fertility postponed versus fertility for...
In high-income countries, women and men born since the 1940s have delayed the birth of their first c...
In high-income countries, women and men born since the 1940s have delayed the birth of their first c...
This paper examines the dispersion of fertility across age and time which has rarely beenstudied. Us...
The last two decades of the XX century have witnessed a steep increase in childbearing age all over ...
Two decades after Aleš Hrdlička’s death the introduction of effective contraceptives broke the evolu...
In this contribution postponement behaviour will mainly be seen on the macro-level. One of the main ...
This paper questions the demographic consequences of birth postponement in Europe. Starting from the...
Previous studies have documented an increasing heterogeneity in first-birth timing in countries expe...
Increasing age at first childbirth has been suggested to increase the risk for infertility. Our obje...
This is the first paper that documents that school entry cut-off date affects the timing of births. ...
Background: This article questions the demographic consequences of birth postponement in Europe. ...
Fertility differences in Europe are largely due to disparities in parity progression after the first...
Several studies have shown that at the individual level there exists a negative relationship between...