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How will COVID affect the completed fertility rate?

Author(s):
Chen, Anqi, author
Gok, Nilufer, author
Munnell, Alicia Haydock, author
Boston College Center for Retirement Research, issuing body
Title(s):
How will COVID affect the completed fertility rate? / Anqi Chen, Nilufer Gok, and Alicia H. Munnell.
Series:
CRR WP ; 2023-1
Country of Publication:
United States
Publisher:
Chestnut Hill, MA : Center for Retirement Research at Boston College, January 2023.
Description:
1 online resource (1 PDF file (17 pages)) : illustrations.
Language:
English
Electronic Links:
https://crr.bc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/wp_2023-1-.pdf
http://resource.nlm.nih.gov/9918573888306676
Summary:
When COVID-19 brought on a health crisis and shut down many parts of the economy in 2020, many expected the fertility rate to plummet, even more than it had in recent years. While initially the severity of the public health and economic crises did result in large declines in fertility, the swift labor market recovery and income support for families led to a small rebound in fertility rates in 2021. The question is what happens next: is the uptick simply a temporary blip or a sign that the decade-long decline in fertility rates is over? The paper found that: (1) COVID resulted in a small increase in births from existing trend across most age groups. (2) This uptick may well be temporary, though, as early data show that the ideal total number of children has dropped sharply for women in their 20s and held steady for women in their early 30s. (3) And evidence from the Great Recession suggests that their expectations will not bounce back in later years. The policy implications of the findings are: (1) More robust fertility expectations data are required to confirm whether younger women want fewer children in the aftermath of COVID. (2) A lower fertility rate will likely result in a smaller workforce, slower economic growth, and higher required tax rates for pay-as-you-go programs such as Social Security, but it also reflects the evolving preferences of women today.
MeSH:
Birth Rate/trends*
COVID-19/economics*
United States
Workforce
Publication Type(s):
Technical Report
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references.
23 ref.
Copyright Status:
Reproduced with permission of the copyright holder. Further use of the material is subject to CC BY license.
NLM ID:
9918573888306676 [Electronic Resource]

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