[PDF][PDF] DEMOGRAPHIC RESEARCH VOLUME 15, ARTICLE 6, PAGES 147-180 PUBLISHED 22 SEPTEMBER 2006

T Frejka, JP Sardon - 2006 - academia.edu
T Frejka, JP Sardon
2006academia.edu
Levels and trends of various facets concerning first births are continuously changing. The
evidence confirms that the postponement of first births is an ongoing and persisting process
which started in western countries among cohorts of the 1940s, but only in the 1960s cohorts
in Central and Eastern Europe. The mean age of women having first births is universally
rising. Fertility of older women was increasing. The decline in childbearing of young women
is robust among the cohorts of the late 1960s and the 1970s; in Southern Europe as well as …
Abstract
Levels and trends of various facets concerning first births are continuously changing. The evidence confirms that the postponement of first births is an ongoing and persisting process which started in western countries among cohorts of the 1940s, but only in the 1960s cohorts in Central and Eastern Europe. The mean age of women having first births is universally rising. Fertility of older women was increasing. The decline in childbearing of young women is robust among the cohorts of the late 1960s and the 1970s; in Southern Europe as well as in central and Eastern Europe the rates of decline have accelerated. Childbearing behavior in the formerly socialist countries is in transition to a different regime.
academia.edu