U.S. birthrate drops for second straight year
The U.S. birthrate dropped for the second year in a row, and experts think the wrenching recession led many people to put off having children. The 2009 birthrate also set a record: lowest in a century.
Births fell 2.6 percent last year even as the population grew, numbers released Friday by the National Center for Health Statistics show.
"It's a good-sized decline for one year. Every month is showing a decline from the year before," said Stephanie Ventura, the demographer who oversaw the report.
The birthrate, which takes into account changes in the population, fell to 13.5 births for every 1,000 people last year.
That's down from 14.3 in 2007 and way down from 30 in 1909, when it was common for people to have big families.
"It doesn't matter how you look at it - fertility has declined," Ventura said.
The situation is a striking turnabout from 2007, when more babies were born in the United States than any other year in the nation's history. The recession began that fall, dragging stocks, jobs and births down.
"When the economy is bad and people are uncomfortable about their financial future, they tend to postpone having children. We saw that in the Great Depression the 1930s and we're seeing that in the Great Recession today," said Andrew Cherlin, a sociology professor at Johns Hopkins University.
"It could take a few years to turn this around," he added, noting that the birthrate stayed low throughout the 1930s.
Another possible factor in the drop: a decline in immigration to the United States.
The downward trend invites worrisome comparisons to Japan and its lost decade of choked growth in the 1990s and very low birthrates. Births in Japan fell 2 percent in 2009 after a slight rise in 2008, its government has said.
Not so in Britain, where the population took its biggest jump in almost half a century last year and the fertility rate is at its highest level since 1973. France's birthrate also has been rising; Germany's birthrate is lower but rising as well.
"Our birth rate is still higher than the birth rate in many wealthy countries and we also have many immigrants entering the country. So we do not need to be worried yet about a birth dearth" that would crimp the nation's ability to take care of its growing elderly population, Cherlin said.
The new U.S. report is a rough count of births from states. It estimates there were 4,136,000 births in 2009, down from a year ago's estimate of 4,247,000 in 2008 and more than 4.3 million in 2007.
The report does not give details on trends in age groups. That will come next spring.
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