© 1999 - 2012
Max-Planck-Gesellschaft

Spain: Short on children and short on family policies

References
View the references of this article
Services
Bookmark this page
Send this article to a friend
Download to Citation Manager
file RIS format
file BibTeX format
Citations and Similar Articles
PubMed
Articles by Margarita Delgado
Articles by Gerardo Meil
Articles by Francisco Zamora López
Google Scholar
Articles by Margarita Delgado
Articles by Gerardo Meil
Articles by Francisco Zamora López
Article and its Citations
 

Margarita Delgado
Gerardo Meil
Francisco Zamora López

 
VOLUME 19 - ARTICLE 27
PAGES 1059 - 1104
Date Received: 21 Jul 2006
Date Published: 1 Jul 2008

http://www.demographic-research.org/volumes/vol19/27/

doi:10.4054/DemRes.2008.19.27
   
PDF file Click the icon to view and/or download the PDF file.
Once you are in the PDF file, use your browser back button to return to this page.

Abstract

Spain’s total fertility rate has more than halved since 1975, when it was 2.8, to the present 1.3 (the lowest rate on record, 1.2, was reached in 1995). At the same time, the mean age at first childbirth has grown continually, seriously hindering any sustained recovery of fertility. Cohort fertility, in turn, has declined uninterruptedly since the 1941 cohort, and according to all estimates, this will drop to 1.6 for women born in the 1960s. A downturn in nuptiality, which has not been offset by a rise in consensual unions, along with the prevalence of contraceptives and abortion, have contributed substantially to falling fertility. Underlying this decrease is the profound cultural, social, and economic change that has raised the perceived costs of leaving the parental home and having children. The lack of any explicit family policy or transfers to compensate for such costs has reinforced that perception.

Author's affiliation
Margarita Delgado
Spanish Council for Scientific Research, Spain
Gerardo Meil
Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Spain
Francisco Zamora López
Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Spain

Keywords
childbearing, Europe, family policy, fertility, Spain

Related links
file You will find all publications in this Special Collection “Childbearing Trends and Policies in Europe” at http://www.demographic-research.org/special/7/

Word count (Main text)
13725

Most recent similar articles in Demographic Research
file [25-6] The contribution of increases in family benefits to Australia’s early 21st-century fertility increase: An empirical analysis (fertility, family policy)
file [24-20] Gender equality and fertility intentions revisited: Evidence from Finland (fertility, Europe)
file [24-10] Should governments in Europe be more aggressive in pushing for gender equality to raise fertility? The second "NO" (family policy, Europe)
file [24-6] Preface to the Rostock Debate on Demographic Change (family policy, Europe)
file [22-34] Understanding the long term effects of family policies on fertility: The diffusion of different family models in France and Germany (fertility, family policy)

[ Back to previous page ]