The rising share of non-marital births: is it only compositional effects?

Publication type

Journal Article

Author

Publication date

June 1, 2009

Summary:

A recent article (Gray et al 2006) contends that the increase in the proportion of births to unmarried women since 1974 in the U.S was not caused by any major change in underlying fertility behaviour, but rather by a decrease in the proportion of women who are married, which increased both the population at risk and the birth rate of unmarried women relative to that of married women. This note argues that the statistical test of this explanation used in the article is invalid because the variables in the analysis are not stationary time series. Correct statistical tests reject the explanation. In particular, the note demonstrates persistent, non-stationary deviations from the relationships predicted by the theory advanced by Gray et al. For long periods, the proportion unmarried played only a small role in the changes in the ratio of non-marital to marital birth rates, contrary to the theory.

Published in

Demography

Volume and page numbers

Volume: 46(1): 193-202 , p.193 -202

Subject

Notes

Albert Sloman Library Periodicals *restricted to Univ. Essex registered users*

#511806

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