نبذة مختصرة : The relationship between levels of social and economic inequality and demographic changes remains poorly documented, particularly for fertility. Covering a period from 1986 to 2018, this paper documents a positive country-level association between income inequality and the dispersion of first birth schedules among women from 88 countries of the Global South. This association is driven by a dual dynamic of the decreasing mean age at first birth among a shrinking group of women who transition to motherhood early, and the increasing mean age at first birth and rising heterogeneity in the timing of childbearing among a group of first birth delayers. We show that this association is strongest in countries where the total fertility rate is below 2.5 children per woman. We argue that differential opportunities for accessing quality education, formal labor markets, and migration are potential drivers of the rising heterogeneity in the ages at which women transition to childbearing. These results highlight the importance of examining societal and demographic processes jointly and clearly indicate that more and better-quality data on social and economic inequality are needed. ; Peer reviewed
Relation: We gratefully acknowledge the support of the University of Pennsylvania that hosted Dr. Batyra as a postdoctoral fellow while this research was conducted. Dr. Batyra's postdoctoral fellowship was funded through the Global Family Change Project that received funding from the National Science Foundation (Grant no. 1729185, PIs: Kohler & Furstenberg). Prof. Myrskyla was supported by the Strategic Research Council (SRC), FLUX consortium, decision numbers: 345130 and 345131. We are thankful to the Population Association of America for allowing us to present a previous version of this work during the 2020 annual meeting. Open access funding enabled and organized by Projekt DEAL.; Torres , A F C , Batyra , E & Myrskylä , M 2022 , ' Income Inequality and Increasing Dispersion of the Transition to First Birth in the Global South ' , Population and Development Review , vol. 48 , no. 1 , pp. 189-215 . https://doi.org/10.1111/padr.12451; http://hdl.handle.net/10138/342252; 4fb4dc31-d69c-4395-8544-ae463cdbb69b; 85124533602; 000752131000001
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