A fundamental reversal of the traditional fertility-development relationship has occurred in highly developed countries so that further socioeconomic development is no longer associated with decreasing fertility, but with increasing fertility. In this paper, we seek to shed light on the mechanisms underlying this reversal by analyzing data from 1975 to 2008 for over 100 countries. We find that the reversal exists from both the period and the cohort perspectives, and is mainly driven by increasing fertility at older reproductive ages. Further, the reversal is only partially explained by changes in the timing of fertility. However, the positive impact of development on fertility is conditional on gender equality: countries that rank high in d...
The 1994 International Conference on Population and Development placed issues of gender at the centr...
While new empirical findings and theoretical frameworks provide insight into the interrelations betw...
There is a recent renewal of interest in the relation between shifts in age structures of population...
A fundamental switch in the fertility—development relationship has occurred so that among highly dev...
During the twentieth century, the global population has gone through unprecedented increases in econ...
Abstract: A number of recent theories in demography suggest a U-shaped relationship between gender e...
Fertility fell rapidly in developed countries in the second half of the twentieth century, a period ...
The changing macro-level relationship between fertility and development (i.e., the standard of livin...
International audienceIn the light of the recent reversal of fertility trends in several highly deve...
The 1970s worries of the "population bomb" were replaced in the 1990s with concerns of population ag...
Background: A number of recent theories in demography suggest a U-shaped relationship between gender...
We examine how far changes in fertility trends are related to ongoing economic development in OECD c...
Fertility fell rapidly in OECD countries in the second half of the twentieth century, a period marke...
We examine how far changes in fertility trends are related to ongoing economic development in OECD c...
Evidence for nation-states suggests that the long-standing negative relationship between fertility a...
The 1994 International Conference on Population and Development placed issues of gender at the centr...
While new empirical findings and theoretical frameworks provide insight into the interrelations betw...
There is a recent renewal of interest in the relation between shifts in age structures of population...
A fundamental switch in the fertility—development relationship has occurred so that among highly dev...
During the twentieth century, the global population has gone through unprecedented increases in econ...
Abstract: A number of recent theories in demography suggest a U-shaped relationship between gender e...
Fertility fell rapidly in developed countries in the second half of the twentieth century, a period ...
The changing macro-level relationship between fertility and development (i.e., the standard of livin...
International audienceIn the light of the recent reversal of fertility trends in several highly deve...
The 1970s worries of the "population bomb" were replaced in the 1990s with concerns of population ag...
Background: A number of recent theories in demography suggest a U-shaped relationship between gender...
We examine how far changes in fertility trends are related to ongoing economic development in OECD c...
Fertility fell rapidly in OECD countries in the second half of the twentieth century, a period marke...
We examine how far changes in fertility trends are related to ongoing economic development in OECD c...
Evidence for nation-states suggests that the long-standing negative relationship between fertility a...
The 1994 International Conference on Population and Development placed issues of gender at the centr...
While new empirical findings and theoretical frameworks provide insight into the interrelations betw...
There is a recent renewal of interest in the relation between shifts in age structures of population...