© 1999 - 2012
Max-Planck-Gesellschaft

Union formation and fertility in Bulgaria and Russia: A life table description of recent trends

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 Dimiter Philipov
Articles by Aiva Jasilioniene
Google Scholar
Articles by Dimiter Philipov
Articles by Aiva Jasilioniene
Article and its Citations
 

Dimiter Philipov
Aiva Jasilioniene

 
VOLUME 19 - ARTICLE 62
PAGES 2057 - 2114
Date Received: 21 Aug 2007
Date Published: 19 Dec 2008

http://www.demographic-research.org/volumes/vol19/62/

doi:10.4054/DemRes.2008.19.62
   
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

The paper provides an extensive descriptive analysis and comparison of recent trends in union formation and fertility in Bulgaria and Russia. The analysis is based on data from the Generation and Gender Surveys (GGS) carried out in 2004. We generate a large number of single- and multi-decrement life tables describing various life course events: leaving home and separation from the parental family, entry into union, first and second childbirth, divorce. Life tables are constructed for real cohorts as well as for synthetic cohorts. We study four real cohorts, born in 1940-44, 1950-54, 1960-64 and 1970-74. Synthetic-cohort life tables are constructed for three periods of time, referring to the pre-transitional demographic situation (1985-1989), the beginning of the transition (1990-1994) and recent demographic developments (1999-2003). We study also Roma and Turkish ethnic groups in Bulgaria. The life tables deliver detailed information that is otherwise unavailable. Our tentative findings indicate that societal transformation had a stronger impact on family-related behavior in the Bulgarian population than in the population of Russia. There is evidence that in some aspects Bulgaria is lagging behind other former socialist and Western European countries where the second demographic transition is more advanced. Evidence also suggests that Russia is lagging behind Bulgaria. However, certain specific features distinctive to Russia, such as the low level of childlessness, a drastic drop in second and subsequent births, and very high divorce rates even compared to Western European countries (it is a long-standing, not just recent trend), lead us to think that Russia may have a model of change particular to the country.

Author's affiliation
Dimiter Philipov
Vienna Institute of Demography, Austrian Academy of Sciences, Austria
Aiva Jasilioniene
Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research, Germany

Keywords
Bulgaria, fertility, life tables, Russia, union formation

Word count (Main text)
14845

Other articles by the same author/authors (in Demographic Research)
file[24-8] Should governments in Europe be more aggressive in pushing for gender equality to raise fertility? The first "NO"
file[22-9] Levels of recent union formation: Six European countries compared
file[19-20] Lithuania: Fertility decline and its determinants
file[19-13] Bulgaria: Ethnic differentials in rapidly declining fertility
file[8-5] Pathways to stepfamily formation in Europe: Results from the FFS
file[7-4] Life-table representations of family dynamics in Sweden, Hungary, and 14 other FFS countries: A project of descriptions of demographic behavior

Most recent similar articles in Demographic Research
file [24-16] Economic crisis and recovery: Changes in second birth rates within occupational classes and educational groups (Russia, fertility)
file [22-9] Levels of recent union formation: Six European countries compared (Russia, Bulgaria)
file [19-24] Russian Federation: From the first to second demographic transition (Russia, fertility)
file [19-13] Bulgaria: Ethnic differentials in rapidly declining fertility (fertility, Bulgaria)
file [18-20] On the structural value of children and its implication on intended fertility in Bulgaria (fertility, Bulgaria)

[ Back to previous page ]