Monday, September 20, 2021

Fertility: Women are choosing fewer babies

     "So as far as controlling the means of reproduction, you can say that in the rich countries at least, women have been 'on strike,' or are at least maintaining a 'work slow-down'.”

                  Jim Stodder


It is no secret. The birthrate for American women is below replacement rate.

College classmate Jim Stodder is an economist with a special interest in "decision sciences." American women--indeed women worldwide where women have choices--are having fewer children. He has prepared a two-part Guest Post on what is happening and why. Today's post looks at the data--what is the reality of family size. A subsequent post will look at the reasons why a traditional cultural "deal" between the sexes is falling apart. Men were breadwinners; women were child bearers. Now, not so much.



Jim Stodder has a PhD. in Economics from Yale (1990) and is a Visiting Professor in the Department of Administrative Sciences at Boston University where he teaches financial regulation and international economics.  His current research is on the best design for carbon taxes and on digital "local community currencies" developed for Barcelona, Brussels, Switzerland, and Bavaria.  He has consulted professionally with all of these. 

Guest Post by Jim Stodder


The ‘Deal’ Between the Sexes -- is Falling Apart, Part One. What the Data Say.


Something big has been slowly building over the last 50 years. In 1970, Shulamith Firestone wrote her brilliant Dialectic of Sex. In it she predicted that just as socialist workers’ movements aimed to control the means of production, the women’s revolution must seize the means of reproduction--the control of sex and childbirth.

That revolution was already underway at the time Firestone was writing, as shown by the World Bank time-series on Fertility--the average number of children born per woman--in “High Income” countries like the U.S. 
Click and Click Falling steadily over the last 60 years, in 1960 that number was 3.03, and in 2019 it was 1.57. So as far as controlling the means of reproduction, you can say that in the rich countries at least, women have been “on strike," or are at least maintaining a "work slow-down.”
And not just in the rich countries. Here I’ve plotted that same fertility measure from 145 different countries against per-capita Gross Domestic Product (GDP) as adjusted for purchasing power in each country, or “Purchasing Power Parity” (PPP).  Click  I’ve labeled the 12 richest countries. ‘Predicted’ and ‘Actual’ Fertility for each country are plotted against the same GDP, so predicted and actual quantities are always lined-up vertically. But predicted how?




I ran a statistical regression that best “fits” the data to explain variation in fertility. The three explanatory variables are (1) GDP per capita (PPP); (2), an Index of Gender Equity. The four top countries are Iceland, Norway, Finland, and Sweden, with scores ranging from 87.6% to 82%.) Variable (3) is the joint effect of (1) times (2) – so a rough ratio of female-to-male economic power.

As is clear from the graph, variable (1) or GDPpc is doing most of the work. This variable alone explains 36% of the variation in fertility between countries. Adding Gender-Equity gets us up to 41% of variation. And finally, looking at Equity times GDP – female-centered economic development--we can explain 46% of total variation. All three variables were “highly significant,” with less than a one-in-a-thousand chance that the apparent correlation is merely by chance.

Now explaining 46% of the variation in fertility might not seem like much. Those 145 countries differ in so many ways that explaining this much fertility variation among those 145 countries, with just 2 variables (plus their joint product), is a big deal.

I think the most interesting thing is the negative effects on fertility from the 1st and 2nd variables--GDPpc and Gender Equality, in contrast with their positive joint effect--GDP weighted by gender equality. 
Click This says that at low levels of economic development, more female choice often means fewer children. But when a higher level of development is reached, more resources controlled by women can mean an increase in their willingness to have kids.

Let’s look at a subset of richer countries, all of them fairly “Westernized” in values, ordered here by fertility (not GDP). France is at the front of the line with South Korea bringing up the rear. Most of those at the rear are not famous for their gender equity. The four Asian countries are rich but patriarchal; Spain and Italy are famous for their macho cultures. Women in such cultures may face a stark choice: You can put on a pantsuit and conquer the world, or you can stay home and be a mother, but it’s very tough to do some of each. 




France, the rich country with the highest fertility rate, has famously 'pro-natalist' policies: three years of paid leave for either parent, generous tax breaks, and subsidized or free day care up to school age. And yet even France is still well below the crucial "replacement rate" of about 2.1 children per woman. That’s true throughout the rich world.

I think they have interesting political implications. I think all our rich low-birth societies need to re-evaluate immigration and become even more pro-natalist than France.

It’s always been unfair that women had to invest so much more time in childcare, but with birth control and more economic opportunity, it’s now unsustainable. If we want women to be highly educated and have children--and as a society, we do--we must support them in both. This also gets us more healthy well-educated children--the most important factor for long-term economic growth. France shows the limits of what can be achieved by mild economic incentives--or else not rely on women’s bodies to bear children. And they have a monopoly on that. 


 

9 comments:

Anonymous said...

The US needs to allow More immigration, not less. We are near the top because of Latinos I’m guessing.
Women don’t get treated fairly in many things. This is just one of a long list.

John C said...

Interesting that Finland tops the list. Helsinki's recent response to a declining birth rate and aging population is to propose allowing English as an official language of commerce to attract skilled (i.e. "professional") immigrants in this article They recognize that their current trend is unsustainable, and Fins in general are either too old or too disinterested to start procreating.

Art Baden said...

Another trend that relates to this issue is that more and more American women are going to , and graduating from, college….. and fewer men are. There was a recent article in the NYT showcasing the data. There has always been an anti-intellectual bent in our society. Boys get praised for sports and physical prowess. And with a college degree no longer guaranteeing economic success, and being so expensive, many young men miss the boat to future economic deco,

So as more and more teenage boys eschew education, take low pay service jobs, and stay in their family basements playing computer games, why would we expect higher achieving women to want to have babies with them? If our society is enabling the creation of an underclass of poorly educated men, that bodes poorly for our future.

Art Baden said...

Economic success

Rick Millward said...

Developed societies are responding to overpopulation, its relationship to climate change, and the difficulty of life when both parents must work to maintain a middle class lifestyle in those economies. It's not an accident that Progressive values emphasize women's rights and quality of life.

In the Republican/Regressive world women are only useful to produce more consumers and workers for the patriarchy. Controlling them is paramount; witness the Texas laws that now reduce women, in particular poor women, essentially to livestock.

Up Close: Road to the White House said...

I deleted a nasty personal comment written in the style of Curt Ankerberg. The comment reflects poorly on him but also on the Republican voters and Trump supporters who share Ankerberg's politics. Ankerberg was found guilty of tax fraud by the Tax Court, notwithstanding Ankerberg's defense that he had a brain disability. When readers see nasty personal and obscene comments they may assume they are by Ankerberg, and they reflect his own brain injuries, or by someone attempting to imitate his behavior.

Mc said...

So economic progress means women having less children.


Thus, forced-birth laws, such as in Texas, equate to lower economic opportunities for women, which means additional children.


This is why the forced-birth laws are not really about "babies." They are designed to suppress women's rights and opportunities (which some men view as a threat).

David Landis said...

If you've ever had a rebellious teenager in your household, you'll understand. I read somewhere years ago that the greatest regret middle age American couple had was having children. It can be an absolute emotional beatdown.

Malcolm said...

Malcolm Drake23 hr ago
My sincere congratulations to all countries whose citizens-women OR men-have decided to reduce the number of children they bring into this world to below replacement levels!. We don’t have the resources to continue population growth.

In fact, we’ve been producing too many offspring for a long, long time.

Take water, for just one example. You think we have droughts? I think we have plenty of water, but too many people using it!

Look back at the 2015 California drought, for example:

“APRIL 1, 2015 5:55 AM PT

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Reporting from Phillips, Calif. — Standing in a brown field that would normally be smothered in several feet of snow, Gov. Jerry Brown on Wednesday ordered cities and towns across California to cut water use by 25% as part of a sweeping set of mandatory drought restrictions, the first in state history”

Now, imagine what the situation would be had we chosen to have slightly smaller families a few years prior to 2015-enough smaller that the population that year had been 25% smaller than it turned out to be. Suddenly, there would have been enough water that, for all practical purposes, there would BE no drought. The 25% water use cut would not have been needed.

Better yet, if we’d kept our fertility level at 2.1 for a few decades in the 20th century, the entire state-thanks to governor Brown's Daddy-would have been having water surpluses in 2015.

Conversely, imagine the water shortages we’d be having RIGHT NOW, if California residents had chosen fertility rates that had resulted in a population double, or triple, what it is now. Imagine what kind of water conservation measures Brown would have had to make! Oh, what the hell? Let’s just reduce all water use by, say, 3/4, instead of 1/4.