The relationship between levels of social and economic inequality and demographic changes remains poorly documented, particularly for fertility. Covering a period from 1986 to 2018, this paper documents a positive country-level association between income inequality and the dispersion of first birth schedules among women from 88 countries of the Global South. This association is driven by a dual dynamic of the decreasing mean age at first birth among a shrinking group of women who transition to motherhood early, and the increasing mean age at first birth and rising heterogeneity in the timing of childbearing among a group of first birth delayers. We show that this association is strongest in countries where the total fertility rate is below ...
Fertility decline in human populations is an inherent evolutionary puzzle with major demographic, so...
In this paper, we examine the inequality in the dynamics of the total fertility rate within 21 sub-S...
This study summarizes patterns of educational differentials in wanted and unwanted fertility at diff...
The relationship between levels of social and economic inequality and demographic changes remains po...
Previous studies have documented an increasing heterogeneity in first-birth timing in countries expe...
While new empirical findings and theoretical frameworks provide insight into the interrelations betw...
In this study the relationship between the distribution of income, fertility and mortality is examin...
Developing countries with highly unequal income distributions, such as Brazil or South Africa, face ...
Two main factors arguably account for the fact that the negative gradient of fertility by educationa...
In spite of a peculiar pattern of the age at first birth in Latin America, there is little research ...
This communication studies the dynamics of fertility in 180 countries in the period 1950 2015 and i...
We document the evolution of gender inequality in labour market outcomes—earnings, labour supply and...
<b>Background</b>: Recent research on fertility in industrialized countries focuses primarily on del...
The decline in human fertility during the demographic transition is one of the most profound changes...
In the course of demographic transitions (DTs), two large-scale trends become apparent: (i) the broa...
Fertility decline in human populations is an inherent evolutionary puzzle with major demographic, so...
In this paper, we examine the inequality in the dynamics of the total fertility rate within 21 sub-S...
This study summarizes patterns of educational differentials in wanted and unwanted fertility at diff...
The relationship between levels of social and economic inequality and demographic changes remains po...
Previous studies have documented an increasing heterogeneity in first-birth timing in countries expe...
While new empirical findings and theoretical frameworks provide insight into the interrelations betw...
In this study the relationship between the distribution of income, fertility and mortality is examin...
Developing countries with highly unequal income distributions, such as Brazil or South Africa, face ...
Two main factors arguably account for the fact that the negative gradient of fertility by educationa...
In spite of a peculiar pattern of the age at first birth in Latin America, there is little research ...
This communication studies the dynamics of fertility in 180 countries in the period 1950 2015 and i...
We document the evolution of gender inequality in labour market outcomes—earnings, labour supply and...
<b>Background</b>: Recent research on fertility in industrialized countries focuses primarily on del...
The decline in human fertility during the demographic transition is one of the most profound changes...
In the course of demographic transitions (DTs), two large-scale trends become apparent: (i) the broa...
Fertility decline in human populations is an inherent evolutionary puzzle with major demographic, so...
In this paper, we examine the inequality in the dynamics of the total fertility rate within 21 sub-S...
This study summarizes patterns of educational differentials in wanted and unwanted fertility at diff...