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France and Great Britain: rising educational participation results in later births

France and Great Britain: rising educational participation results in later births
France and Great Britain: rising educational participation results in later births
Women are having their first child at later ages in developed countries. The mean age at first birth is now four years later in England and Wales and in France than in the mid-1970s. The expansion in education and the longer time enrolled in education are the principal factors explaining this delay. In both countries, the age at the completion of education and at first birth have in fact risen by about the same margin. The time from the end of education to first birth rose by only half a year in the 15 years between 1980-84 and 1995-99.

The link between the two trends emerges clearly when we measure fertility by time since completing education rather than by chronological age. And while longer educational enrolment explains most of the delay to childbearing, it is also the best educated who have delayed childbearing the most after completing their education.
0184-7783
Ni Bhrolchain, Máire
c9648b58-880e-4296-a173-7241449e0078
Beaujouan, Eva
78e2a0b3-3489-4735-b436-065bda66cede
Ni Bhrolchain, Máire
c9648b58-880e-4296-a173-7241449e0078
Beaujouan, Eva
78e2a0b3-3489-4735-b436-065bda66cede

Ni Bhrolchain, Máire and Beaujouan, Eva (2012) France and Great Britain: rising educational participation results in later births. Population et Sociétés, (495).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Women are having their first child at later ages in developed countries. The mean age at first birth is now four years later in England and Wales and in France than in the mid-1970s. The expansion in education and the longer time enrolled in education are the principal factors explaining this delay. In both countries, the age at the completion of education and at first birth have in fact risen by about the same margin. The time from the end of education to first birth rose by only half a year in the 15 years between 1980-84 and 1995-99.

The link between the two trends emerges clearly when we measure fertility by time since completing education rather than by chronological age. And while longer educational enrolment explains most of the delay to childbearing, it is also the best educated who have delayed childbearing the most after completing their education.

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More information

Published date: 20 December 2012
Additional Information: Publisher: INED, Paris
Organisations: Social Statistics & Demography

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 346492
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/346492
ISSN: 0184-7783
PURE UUID: 3607eb51-7d51-41ae-acf9-6b4b31252507

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 20 Dec 2012 14:42
Last modified: 11 Dec 2021 01:18

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Contributors

Author: Máire Ni Bhrolchain
Author: Eva Beaujouan

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