WASHINGTON(AP)
More women in their early 40s are childless, and those who are
having children are having fewer than ever before, the Census
Bureau said Monday.
In the last 30 years, the number of women age 40 to 44 with no
children has doubled, from 10 percent to 20 percent. And those who
are mothers have an average of 1.9 children each, more than one
child fewer than women of the same age in 1976.
The report, Fertility of American Women: 2006, is the first from
the Census Bureau to use data from an annual survey of 76 million
women, ages 15 to 50, allowing a state-by-state comparison of
fertility patterns. About 4.2 million women participating in the
survey, which was conducted from January through December 2006, had
had a child in the previous year. The statistics could be used by
state agencies to provide maternal care services, the report
said.
The survey found that in 2006 women with graduate or
professional degrees recorded the most births of all educational
levels. About 36 percent of women who gave birth in the previous 12
months were separated, divorced, widowed or unmarried.
Unemployed women had about twice as many babies as working
women, although women in the labor force accounted for the majority
_ 57 percent _ of recent births. Only a quarter of all women who
had a child over the past year were living below the poverty
level.
Coupled with fertility data collected biannually, the report
also revealed longer term trends, including how second-generation
Hispanic women are having fewer babies than their foreign-born
grandmothers and first-generation American mothers.
Differences among states also emerged. California, Nevada,
Texas, Arizona, Florida, Illinois, New York and New Jersey had a
greater percentage of foreign-born women who became mothers in
2006. A bigger share of women in the Southeast and Southwest who
gave birth in the year prior to the survey did so in poverty.
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