scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Low fertility at the turn of the twenty-first century

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
This work reviews the research on low fertility through the predominant frameworks and theories used to explain it and focuses on the ability of theory to situate previous and future findings and concludes with directions for furthur research.
Abstract
In the past few decades, demographic concerns have shifted from rapid population growth fueled by high fertility to concerns of population decline produced by very low, sub-replacement fertility levels. Once considered a problem unique to Europe or developed nations, concerns now center on the global spread of low fertility. Nearly half of the world's population now lives in countries with fertility at or below replacement levels. Further, by the mid-twenty-first century three of four countries now described as developing are projected to reach or slip below replacement fertility. We review the research on low fertility through the predominant frameworks and theories used to explain it. These explanations range from decomposition and proximate determinant frameworks to grand theories on the fundamental causes underlying the pervasiveness and spread of low fertility. We focus on the ability of theory to situate previous and future findings and conclude with directions for furthur research.

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Social and Economic Returns to College Education in the United States

Michael Hout
- 13 Jul 2012 - 
TL;DR: This paper found that education correlates strongly with most important social and economic outcomes such as economic success, health, family stability, and social connections, and that investments in education pay off for individuals in many ways.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fertility in Advanced Societies: A Review of Research

TL;DR: This paper provides a review of fertility research in advanced societies, societies in which birth control is the default option, and summarizes how contemporary research has explained ongoing and expected fertility changes across time and space.
Journal ArticleDOI

Gender equity and fertility intentions in Italy and the Netherlands

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide an empirical test of gender equity theory by examining whether the unequal division of household labour leads to lower fertility intentions of women in different institutional contexts in Italy and the Netherlands.
Journal ArticleDOI

China's below-replacement fertility: government policy or socioeconomic development?

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that although low fertility in China was achieved under the government's restrictive one-child policy, structural changes brought about by socioeconomic development and ideational shifts accompanying the new wave of globalization played a key role in China's fertility reduction.
Journal ArticleDOI

Probabilistic projections of the total fertility rate for all countries.

TL;DR: A Bayesian projection model is described to produce country-specific projections of the total fertility rate (TFR) for all countries using an autoregressive model, in which long-term TFR projections converge toward and oscillate around replacement level.
References
More filters
Book

A Treatise on the Family

TL;DR: The Enlarged Edition as mentioned in this paper provides an overview of the evolution of the family and the state Bibliography Index. But it does not discuss the relationship between fertility and the division of labor in families.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Treatise on the Family.

Journal ArticleDOI

A Theory of Structure: Duality, Agency, and Transformation

TL;DR: A theory of structure that restores human agency to social actors, builds the possibility of change into the concept of structure, and overcomes the divide between semiotic and materialist visions of structure is proposed in this article.
Journal ArticleDOI

On the Interaction between the Quantity and Quality of Children

TL;DR: De Tray and Willis as discussed by the authors argued that the negative relation between quantity and quality often observed is a consequence of a low substitution elasticity in a family's utility function between parents' consumption or level of living and that of their children.
ReportDOI

Population, Technology, and Growth: From the Malthusian Regime to the Demographic Transition and Beyond

TL;DR: In this paper, a unified model of growth, population, and technological progress is developed, which is consistent with long-term historical evidence, and it is shown that technological progress creates a state of disequilibrium which raises the return to human capital and induces patients to substitute child quality for quantity.
Related Papers (5)