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Change in birthrate by county. From 1996-2007, birthrates grew fastest in small cities and rural areas; from 2007-2019, birthrates have fallen nearly everywhere. New York Times maps adapted by The Rural Blog. Click the image to enlarge it or click here for the interactive versions. |
Younger women across the U.S., including in rural areas, are increasingly delaying childbearing to focus on education and careers. "The result has been the slowest growth of the American population since the 1930s, and a profound change in American motherhood," Sabrina Tavernise, Claire Cain Miller, Quoctrung Bui and Robert Gebeloff report for The New York Times. "Women under 30 have become much less likely to have children. Since 2007, the birthrate for women in their 20s has fallen by 28 percent, and the biggest recent declines have been among unmarried women. The only age groups in which birthrates rose over that period were women in their 30s and 40s — but even those began to decline over the past three years."
The trend became evident in the past decade, with the birthrate falling fastest in places with the highest job growth (which are more often metro counties). No causal link has been established, but women in such areas may therefore have more of an incentive to delay motherhood, said Caitlin Myers, a Middlebury College economics professor who analyzed county-level birth records for the Times. As women become more educated, they become more convinced that motherhood has a price, she said.
It's happening in rural counties too, though not as much as in metro counties. "The large urban counties that have gained the most jobs and population since the recession have seen birthrates fall twice as fast as smaller, rural counties that have not recovered as strongly," the Times reports. Fertility tends to be higher in economically stagnant areas, and childbearing often has more cultural importance for women.![]() |
Percentage of people age 25 and up with at least a bachelor's degree, from 2005-2009 on the left, and 2015-2019 on the right. U.S. Census Bureau maps adapted by The Rural Blog. Click the image to enlarge it or click here to read the original report. |
from The Rural Blog https://ift.tt/2UgEJbf U.S. birthrate falls as more young women, including rural, delay childbearing to focus on school and work - Entrepreneur Generations
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