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France: High and stable fertility

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Laurent Toulemon
Ariane Pailhé
Clémentine Rossier

 
VOLUME 19 - ARTICLE 16
PAGES 503 - 556
Date Received: 18 Sep 2006
Date Published: 1 Jul 2008

http://www.demographic-research.org/volumes/vol19/16/

doi:10.4054/DemRes.2008.19.16
   
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Abstract
The current total fertility rate in France is around 1.9 children per woman. This is a relatively high level by current European standards and makes France an outlier, despite the fact that its other demographic trends, especially conjugal behaviour, and social and economic trends are not very different from other Western European countries. France can serve as a counterfactual test case for some of the hypotheses advanced to explain the current low level of fertility in most European countries (delay in fertility, decline in marriage, increased birth control, greater economic uncertainty). France’s fertility level can be partly explained by its active family policy introduced after the Second World War, and adapted in the 1980s to accommodate women’s entry into the labour force. This policy is the result of a battle, fuelled by pro-natalism, between the conservative supporters of family values and the promoters of state-supported individual equality. French family policy thus encompasses a wide range of measures based on varying ideological backgrounds, and it is difficult to classify in comparison to the more precisely focused family policies of other European welfare states. The active family policy seems to have created especially positive attitudes towards two- or three child families in France.

Author's affiliation
Laurent Toulemon
Institut national d´études démographiques (INED), Germany
Ariane Pailhé
Institut national d'études démographiques, France
Clémentine Rossier
Institut national d´études démographiques (INED), Germany

Keywords
childbearing, fertility, France

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)
14382

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