reviewHuman Reproduction UpdateJun 7, 2011BRONZE OA

Why do people postpone parenthood? Reasons and social policy incentives

MMMelinda MillsRRRonald R. RindfussPMPeter McDonaldETEgbert te VeldeOBon behalf of the ESHRE Reproduction and Society Task Force

University of Groningen · East–West Center · +2 more institutions

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Abstract

Background

Never before have parents in most Western societies had their first children as late as in recent decades. What are the central reasons for postponement? What is known about the link between the delay of childbearing and social policy incentives to counter these trends? This review engages in a systematic analysis of existing evidence to extract the maximum amount of knowledge about the reasons for birth postponement and the effectiveness of social policy incentives.

Methods

The review followed the PRISMA procedure, with literature searches conducted in relevant demographic, social science and medical science databases (SocINDEX, Econlit, PopLine, Medline) and located via other sources. The search focused on subjects related to childbearing behaviour, postponement and family policies. National, international and individual-level data sources were also used to present summary statistics.

Citation impact

1,047
total citations
FWCI
109.16
Percentile
100%
References
172
Citations per year

Authors

5

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Postponement
  • Incentive
  • Social policy
  • Economics
  • Public economics
  • Labour economics
  • Market economy
  • Operations management
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Funding