Dribe Martin, Hacker J David, Scalone Francesco
a Lund University.
Popul Stud (Camb). 2014;68(2):135-49. doi: 10.1080/00324728.2014.889741. Epub 2014 Apr 1.
We used micro-level data from the censuses of 1900 to investigate the impact of socio-economic status on net fertility during the fertility transition in five Northern American and European countries (Canada, Iceland, Norway, Sweden, and the USA). The study is therefore unlike most previous research on the historical fertility transition, which used aggregate data to examine economic correlates of demographic behaviour at regional or national levels. Our data included information on number of children by age, occupation of the mother and father, place of residence, and household context. The results show highly similar patterns across countries, with the elite and upper middle classes having considerably lower net fertility early in the transition. These patterns remain after controlling for a range of individual and community-level fertility determinants and geographical unobserved heterogeneity.
我们使用了1900年人口普查的微观层面数据,来研究北美和欧洲五个国家(加拿大、冰岛、挪威、瑞典和美国)在生育率转变期间社会经济地位对净生育率的影响。因此,这项研究不同于以往大多数关于历史生育率转变的研究,那些研究使用汇总数据来考察区域或国家层面人口行为的经济关联因素。我们的数据包括按年龄划分的子女数量、父母职业、居住地点以及家庭背景等信息。结果显示,各国呈现出高度相似的模式,在转变初期,精英阶层和中上层阶级的净生育率显著较低。在控制了一系列个人和社区层面的生育率决定因素以及地理上未观察到的异质性之后,这些模式依然存在。