Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Elizabeth Gregory

GET UPDATES FROM Elizabeth Gregory
 

Post-Fertile Boomers Push the Birth Rate Drop

Posted: 09/02/10 09:00 AM ET

New data from the National Center for Health Statistics show that the both the U.S. crude birthrate and the fertility rate fell in 2009, hand in hand with the falling economy, continuing the trend begun in 2008. People don't want to have kids they can't afford -- basically a responsible and predicted decision.

It happens that the crude birth rate, at 13.5*, is the lowest in a century (so basically it's the lowest ever in the US) -- and that's making headlines and summoning images of a babyless, unstable future. But that's not what's happening.

The wire story tells us:

The United States birthrate has fallen to its lowest level in at least a century as many people apparently decided they could not afford more mouths to feed ...The situation is a striking turnabout from 2007, when more babies were born in the United States than in any other year in the nation's history. The recession began that fall, dragging down stocks, jobs and births.

Connections like these confuse the birth rate, the fertility rate and the number of births. The birthrate (the number of births/1000 people in the population) is not the important indicator here -- what matters is the fertility rate (the number of births/1000 fertile women (15-44), which is also sometimes confusingly called a birth rate. The fertility rate did drop a bit last year, but not to record levels.

2010-09-01-chart1.jpg>

So you're not crazy. Those babies you saw in the park (or took to the park) this weekend were not figments of your imagination. And hospital delivery rooms are not suddenly empty. As you'll recall, the fertility rate in 2007 was way up (to 69.5)† -- higher than it had been since 1990 (70.9), so having it fall a bit now (down to 66.8) just means that we're back where we were four years ago before the economic boom (which turned out to be pretty pseudo) led some folks to have more kids than they might otherwise.

In spite of the recession, in spite of the headlines and in spite of the fact that fewer kids are arriving lately, we are not seeing record low numbers of women having kids. But we are seeing record numbers of older people. As the last boomers move out of the fertility sector, into that 45-64 age band, and as older folks continue to stick around longer and longer, it negatively affects the birth rate because the proportion of infertile people is increasing. Even if the fertility rate stays steady, when the proportion of old folks grows, the proportion of fertile women in the populace necessarily decreases, and so the crude birth rate does too. Like crude oil, the crude birth rate needs some refining to be useful.

2010-09-01-chart3.jpg

As noted, in 2009 the fertility rate did also decline (from the recent high of 69.5 in 2007 to 66.8) but it's still in the narrow range it's shimmered in for the past 40 years, and apart from the past three years, higher than it's been since 1993, when it was 67.0. The record bottomed out in 1997, at 63.6.

As you can see in the first graph above, the real story of fertility decline happened most recently in the 60s and 70s, and before that between the world wars. The ups and downs of our era are minuscule in comparison. Contra the needs of the news cycle, nothing drastic or frightening is happening on the fertility front this year. It's just plain family planning.

***

*The rate in 1800 was about 55 births / 1000 population; in 1900 it was about 30, in 1929 it had declined to 21.2; by 1936 at the low point in the depression it was 18.6. After the war it boomed back up into the mid 20s, but headed down after that to 15.9 in 1980, 14.0 in 2000, and the new low of 13.5 in 2009.

†2007 was also the year we had a record high number of babies--outdoing the baby boom high in 1957, raised because the number of people having babies in 2007 was much bigger, though the fertility rate in 2007 was much lower than in 1957 (69.5 compared to 122.7)--along with stories of rising total fertility rates (numbers of babies a person would have over her lifetime at the current rate) over the year prior.


Elizabeth Gregory is the author of Ready: Why Women Are Embracing the New Later Motherhood (Basic Books, 2008). She blogs at www.domesticproduct.net.

This post appeared first on RH Reality Check.

 
 
 

Follow Elizabeth Gregory on Twitter: www.twitter.com/egregory

 
 
  • Comments
  • 17
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
photo
beckola
Dance like no one is watching
08:14 AM on 09/04/2010
At 47, Kelly Preston is having another baby with husband John Travolta. Some in that 45-64 age range are still fertile, it would seem.
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Elizabeth Gregory
Ready: Why Women Are Embracing the New Later Mothe
09:22 AM on 09/05/2010
A very few are fertile in the usual way. Most births in this age band these days involve donated eggs.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ozark Homesteader
http://ozarkhomesteader.wordpress.com
09:39 AM on 09/03/2010
I see this as bad news if and only if the decline in births is due to chemicals that are reducing fertility and closing off options. Otherwise, this is good news for our environment and future kids' education and employment options. Perhaps if Congress fails to pass and the states fail to ratify Constitutional limits on corporations, workers can still come out on top if the labor market eases.
09:19 PM on 09/02/2010
What about claims that synthetic chemical contamination is reducing human fertility? Sperm counts reportedly down in a number of industrial countries, fertility clinic business up. And we know those treatments tend to produce multiple births, which could skew stats in interesting ways.... Wish the analysis had gone a bit deeper.
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Elizabeth Gregory
Ready: Why Women Are Embracing the New Later Mothe
07:55 PM on 09/03/2010
Can't do everything! This analysis was specifically about going deeper on the birth rate / fertility rate distinction than the host of articles on the topic did last week.
The provisional report put out with the 2009 figures did not offer the data you seek. Overall, multiples are increasing but still a low proportion of births. In 2004, the year for which I have data to hand, among mothers 35 and over (the group most likely to go to fertility clinics), 585,407 babies were born to 568,940 moms.
So that's somewhere around 16,000 multiple births that might be due to fertility treatment (though natural twins are also more common in older moms) -- about 3% of later births, and about 0.4% of total births.
If you want more data, go to www.cdc.gov and search births data.
02:13 PM on 09/04/2010
Appreciate the response, and do understand my concerns belong in a separate piece. It's simply my policy to inject these issues whenever the oppty allows as I feel they deserve broader attention.
07:55 PM on 09/02/2010
The best thing a couple can do to help the planet is limit themselves to two children (okay 2.1). Better by far than a hybrid car, or solar panels on the roof.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
JScott
John Galt's last name is McGuffin-Smithee
11:02 PM on 09/02/2010
I already do my part. Plus I don't use paper towels, I reuse grocery bags too.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
jennysez
11:33 AM on 09/03/2010
Can we trade carbon credits to have more children? Nah, I'm just messing with you, I'm a big believer in the whole "replace yourself" idea of procreation. One parent = one kid, two parents = two kids in a family. But what to do about those families who have more than 1 or 2 kids, like say the Duggars with their 19+? I don't believe in actively restricting people from having children, like China, but the environmental impact of a household that size should be considered.
photo
ChaCubed
Republicans: the Antichrist
04:03 PM on 09/02/2010
My response to the article that the 'recession was fueling a birthrate drop': "“This raises several questions "rate per 1000" what? People? People of child bearing age? Are they accounting for the aging population of boomers who have finished reproducing?

How can this be? The two-child family is a thing of the past, isn't it? People are having 4, 5, 6 children - either with one mate or having a kid-or-two with each new mate.

I don't understand how this report can be the opposite of what appears to be.”

Quote from article: "So you're not crazy."

Thank you.

:).
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Lordcron
Get on my Left if you know you ain't Right!
12:13 PM on 09/02/2010
What bothers me is the laws surrounding these statistics. We don't bother to educate the population about making and having babies we minipulate them. This is why I'm in favor of more birth control for men. A simple condom just won't work. Females have a billion choices and all a man has is one in this country. Meanwhile other countries have a pill for men and all kinds of ways to level the playing field. I don't have to be tricked into having kids. I want more choice. If a woman can control her ovulation then men should have a pill to control his sperm. I don't like it that a woman gets to dictate whether the sperm will meet the egg and make a man have children when all they planned was a good time for example. No this didn't happen to me but I don't like that the woman has all the say and all you can tell a man is don't have sex? That's not realistic and the laws are playing on that. Now women love this because they know it's in there favor so of course they don't mind this thing being the way it is. Give a man more choices is all I'm saying and stop treating the public like things to play with when all you have to do is give good information.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Honora
01:52 PM on 09/02/2010
Well stated. It's not a pretty picture to bring children into such an upset world.
photo
beckola
Dance like no one is watching
08:15 AM on 09/04/2010
As long as you acknowledge that a woman "has all the say" in all respects, including choosing to NOT have your baby.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Lordcron
Get on my Left if you know you ain't Right!
07:37 PM on 09/04/2010
That would be better then having it!
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Lordcron
Get on my Left if you know you ain't Right!
07:43 PM on 09/04/2010
Thank you for proving my point. You appear to be fighting to keep the edge of control of someone elses future. That's exactly my point.