Extended family or childfree?
Study pinpoints factors in fulfillment of early fertility desires of college-educated women in the U.S.
Women with college degrees in the US are less likely than others to become mothers, even if they had previously wanted a large family when they were younger. If these women decide to start a family though, they have the most children in the study compared to other demographics, found Natalie Nitsche in her recent paper.
How are the desire for children at a young age, the level of education, the timing of first marriage and the actual number of children of one's own by age 43 related for men and women in the USA? Natalie Nitsche, research scientist at the Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research (MPIDR) in Rostock, Germany, and a colleague investigated this complex interaction and published the study in the journal Demography.
The researchers discovered two crucial connections. First, women with college degrees with the desire to have many children at a young age are less likely to become mothers at all than less educated women who wanted a large family. Second, the timing of the first marriage influences for both men and women whether they become parents at all.
"The majority of women who later graduated from college wanted a large family when they where young. Among all those women who wished for many children, however, these women rarely become mothers at all," says Natalie Nitsche. "By the way, men with a high desire for children do not have this difference according to their level of education," adds Nitsche.
Many children or no children at all
However, when these women become mothers, they have the most children in the study comparison. “These women may be less inclined to do things halfway. They seem to decide either to have an extended family or to not have children at all,” says Nitsche.
For their study, the researchers evaluated data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1979. In this representative longitudinal survey, several thousand Americans born between 1957 and 1964 regularly reported, among other things, on their desire to have children, their educational attainment and their labor market experience. In the analyses, the researchers used data from more than 5,000 respondents and divided them into four different groups according to the highest level of education. They also divided the same respondents into three groups according to their desire to have children at a young age depending on whether they stated when they were between 14 and 18 either no children/one child, two children ,or at least three children,.
Social norms seem more important than biological factors
Whether you are a man or a woman, people who marry for the first time or are in a steady partnership for the first time after age 30 are significantly less likely become a parent at all. “It seems that biological factors play a smaller role than societal influences,” says Nitsche. Even though men can have children longer than women, men still do not become parents much more often than women when the first stable partnership occurs after the age of 35. Whether these findings also apply to European countries or to men and women born after 1964 remains to be seen in further studies.