This paper examines the dispersion of fertility across age and time which has rarely been studied. Using data from the Human Fertility Database, we examine fertility age schedules by looking at standard deviations in age at first births in European countries at different stages of fertility postponement. The standard deviation at first birth remained overall constant during the start of fertility postponement in the early 1970s, then it increased during the second stage marking the progression of postponement. It remained again constant at a higher level during recent years. The paper discusses the structural changes that might have caused these changes
Fertility postponement and the concomitant decline in fertility levels are the most prominent trends...
This paper questions the demographic consequences of birth postponement in Europe. Starting from the...
Aims: The most commonly used indicator of fertility, the period total fertility rate (TFRp), tends t...
This paper examines the dispersion of fertility across age and time which has rarely beenstudied. Us...
Previous studies have documented an increasing heterogeneity in first-birth timing in countries expe...
Fertility rates in most developed societies have been declining at younger ages and rising at older ...
This paper outlines a method that analyses how cohort and period childbearing postponement and recup...
<b>Background</b>: In the period 1995-2002 there was a change in trajectory from decline to rise in ...
In high-income countries, women and men born since the 1940s have delayed the birth of their first c...
Fertility rates in most developed societies have been declining at younger ages and rising at older ...
Fertility rates in most developed societies have been declining at younger ages and rising at older ...
Across developed countries, cohorts of women born after World War II have seen a shift of childbeari...
Prognosing of fertility has been one of the most important tasks in demography and population statis...
Using the information provided by the Council of Europe (2002), we analyse the final number of child...
Fertility differences in Europe are largely due to disparities in parity progression after the first...
Fertility postponement and the concomitant decline in fertility levels are the most prominent trends...
This paper questions the demographic consequences of birth postponement in Europe. Starting from the...
Aims: The most commonly used indicator of fertility, the period total fertility rate (TFRp), tends t...
This paper examines the dispersion of fertility across age and time which has rarely beenstudied. Us...
Previous studies have documented an increasing heterogeneity in first-birth timing in countries expe...
Fertility rates in most developed societies have been declining at younger ages and rising at older ...
This paper outlines a method that analyses how cohort and period childbearing postponement and recup...
<b>Background</b>: In the period 1995-2002 there was a change in trajectory from decline to rise in ...
In high-income countries, women and men born since the 1940s have delayed the birth of their first c...
Fertility rates in most developed societies have been declining at younger ages and rising at older ...
Fertility rates in most developed societies have been declining at younger ages and rising at older ...
Across developed countries, cohorts of women born after World War II have seen a shift of childbeari...
Prognosing of fertility has been one of the most important tasks in demography and population statis...
Using the information provided by the Council of Europe (2002), we analyse the final number of child...
Fertility differences in Europe are largely due to disparities in parity progression after the first...
Fertility postponement and the concomitant decline in fertility levels are the most prominent trends...
This paper questions the demographic consequences of birth postponement in Europe. Starting from the...
Aims: The most commonly used indicator of fertility, the period total fertility rate (TFRp), tends t...