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US birth rates dip with the economy, plummet for young women, CDC report shows
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Contributor | Homegrown Democrat |
Last Edited | Homegrown Democrat Nov 17, 2011 04:05pm |
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Category | Report |
Media | Newspaper - Washington Post |
News Date | Thursday, November 17, 2011 04:55:00 PM UTC0:0 |
Description | ATLANTA — The economy may well be the best form of birth control.
U.S. births dropped for the third straight year — especially for young mothers — and experts think money worries are the reason.
A federal report released Thursday showed declines in the birth rate for all races and most age groups. Teens and women in their early 20s had the most dramatic dip, to the lowest rates since record-keeping began in the 1940s. Also, the rate of cesarean sections stopped going up for the first time since 1996.
Experts suspected the economy drove down birth rates in 2008 and 2009 as women put off having children. With the 2010 figures, suspicion has turned into certainty.
“I don’t think there’s any doubt now that it was the recession. It could not be anything else,” said Carl Haub, a demographer with the Population Reference Bureau, a Washington, D.C.-based research organization. He was not involved in the new report. |
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