Early in the 21st century, three-quarters of Europe’s population lived in countries with fertility considerably below replacement. This general conclusion is arrived at irrespective of whether period or cohort fertility measures are used. In Western and Northern Europe, fertility quantum was slightly below replacement. In Southern, Central and Eastern Europe, fertility quantum as measured by the period total fertility rate (TFR) and its tempo-adjusted version was markedly below replacement; in many countries it was around 1.5, and in some populations it was as low as 1.3 to 1.4 births per woman. Throughout Europe, a historic transformation of childbearing patterns characterised by a pronounced delay of entry into parenthood has been taking ...
This special issue of the European Journal of Population focuses on possible economic consequences o...
This study discusses fertility trends and variation in countries that have completed the transition ...
The EU population is characterised by low fertility rates, delayed motherhood and an increase in chi...
Fertility has by now reached very low levels in all European countries, with the exception of Albani...
THE MAJORITY OF the world’s population is living in countries with near-replacement or below-replace...
Total fertility rates throughout the European Union have fallen and are now below the replacement ra...
<b>Background</b>: In the period 1995-2002 there was a change in trajectory from decline to rise in ...
This paper focuses on possible economic consequences of low fertility in Europe. It summarizes a sel...
Following the era of the ‘golden age of marriage’ and the baby boom in the 1950s and 1960s, marriage...
In the past few decades, demographic concerns have shifted from rapid population growth fueled by hi...
'In this paper we conduct descriptive aggregate analyses to revisit the relation between low and low...
INTRODUCTION: Although fertility rates are falling in many countries, Europe is the continent with t...
In recent decades, levels of childlessness have been increasing rapidly in most European countries....
Period fertility rates fell to previously unseen low levels in a large number of countries beginning...
While period fertility started to drop significantly below replacement in most Western European coun...
This special issue of the European Journal of Population focuses on possible economic consequences o...
This study discusses fertility trends and variation in countries that have completed the transition ...
The EU population is characterised by low fertility rates, delayed motherhood and an increase in chi...
Fertility has by now reached very low levels in all European countries, with the exception of Albani...
THE MAJORITY OF the world’s population is living in countries with near-replacement or below-replace...
Total fertility rates throughout the European Union have fallen and are now below the replacement ra...
<b>Background</b>: In the period 1995-2002 there was a change in trajectory from decline to rise in ...
This paper focuses on possible economic consequences of low fertility in Europe. It summarizes a sel...
Following the era of the ‘golden age of marriage’ and the baby boom in the 1950s and 1960s, marriage...
In the past few decades, demographic concerns have shifted from rapid population growth fueled by hi...
'In this paper we conduct descriptive aggregate analyses to revisit the relation between low and low...
INTRODUCTION: Although fertility rates are falling in many countries, Europe is the continent with t...
In recent decades, levels of childlessness have been increasing rapidly in most European countries....
Period fertility rates fell to previously unseen low levels in a large number of countries beginning...
While period fertility started to drop significantly below replacement in most Western European coun...
This special issue of the European Journal of Population focuses on possible economic consequences o...
This study discusses fertility trends and variation in countries that have completed the transition ...
The EU population is characterised by low fertility rates, delayed motherhood and an increase in chi...