How does variance in fertility change over the demographic transition?

Most work on the human fertility transition has focused on declines in mean fertility. However, understanding changes in the variance of reproductive outcomes can be equally important for evolutionary questions about the heritability of fertility, individual determinants of fertility and changing pa...

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Published inPhilosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B. Biological sciences Vol. 371; no. 1692; p. 20150155
Main Authors Hruschka, Daniel J., Burger, Oskar
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England The Royal Society 19.04.2016
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Summary:Most work on the human fertility transition has focused on declines in mean fertility. However, understanding changes in the variance of reproductive outcomes can be equally important for evolutionary questions about the heritability of fertility, individual determinants of fertility and changing patterns of reproductive skew. Here, we document how variance in completed fertility among women (45–49 years) differs across 200 surveys in 72 low- to middle-income countries where fertility transitions are currently in progress at various stages. Nearly all (91%) of samples exhibit variance consistent with a Poisson process of fertility, which places systematic, and often severe, theoretical upper bounds on the proportion of variance that can be attributed to individual differences. In contrast to the pattern of total variance, these upper bounds increase from high- to mid-fertility samples, then decline again as samples move from mid to low fertility. Notably, the lowest fertility samples often deviate from a Poisson process. This suggests that as populations move to low fertility their reproduction shifts from a rate-based process to a focus on an ideal number of children. We discuss the implications of these findings for predicting completed fertility from individual-level variables.
Bibliography:Theme issue ‘Understanding variation in human fertility: what can we learn from evolutionary demography?’ compiled and edited by David W. Lawson, Rebecca Sear, Mary K. Shenk, Stephen C. Stearns and Hillard Kaplan
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One contribution of 14 to a theme issue ‘Understanding variation in human fertility: what can we learn from evolutionary demography?’
ISSN:0962-8436
1471-2970
DOI:10.1098/rstb.2015.0155