Age at last birth and its components

Author:

Suchindran C.M.1,Koo Helen P.2

Affiliation:

1. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Department of Biostatistics, CB No. 7400, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7400

2. Research Triangle Institute, P.O. Box 12194, Research Triangle Park, NC 27709

Abstract

Abstract This paper examines the ways in which the behavior of twentieth century cohorts of American women changed simultaneously in the three components of fertility that determine age at last birth—age at first birth, spacing between subsequent births, and parity progression ratios of subsequent births—to produce changes in the timing of the completion of childbearing. It decomposes changes in the mean age at last birth among cohorts and between whites and nonwhites to changes in these three components. To perform these analyses, we developed and applied a method to estimate the distributions and means of ages at first and last births, birth intervals, and parity progression ratios from age- and parity-specific fertility rates available from vital statistics data. Results show that the cohorts increased and decreased their age at first birth, birth intervals, and parity progression ratios of lower and higher birth orders in almost every possible combination so as to achieve a relatively young age at final birth.

Publisher

Duke University Press

Subject

Demography

Reference23 articles.

1. Comment on Knodel’s ‘Starting, Stopping and Spacing during the Early Stages of Fertility Transition.’;Anderton;Demography,1989

2. Future Fertility of Women by Present Age and Parity: Analysis of American Historical Data, 1917–1980;Das Gupta;Current Population Report Series P23, Special Studies,1985

3. Decomposition of the Difference between Two Rates and Its Consistency When More Than Two Populations Are Involved;Das Gupta;Mathematical Population Studies,1991

4. Ultimate Parity Distribution and Mean Age at Childbearing by Birth Order for American Women: 1917–1980;Das Gupta;Proceedings of IUSSP International Population Conference,1985

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