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Anne Hare and her husband made a momentous decision three
years ago: They would not have children. It's not that
they don't
like kids, she says. They simply don't want to alter the
lifestyle they enjoy.
"
With kids, especially young kids, infants and toddlers,
you really can't do the active stuff we like to do," said
Hare, 43, a fitness program coordinator from Gainesville, Ga.
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WASHINGTON, Oct. 24, 2003
Hare is among 26.7 million women aged 15 to
44 who are childless, a record number, according to new Census
Bureau data from a June 2002 survey. They represent nearly
44 percent of women in that age group.
The number of women 15 to 44 forgoing or putting off motherhood
has grown nearly 10 percent since 1990, when roughly 24.3 million
were in that class.
Direct comparisons before 1990 are not possible because the
bureau didn't track women younger than 18 until then.
The latest numbers reflect the well-established trend of more
women going to college and entering the work force, then delaying
motherhood or deciding not to have children. More also are
choosing adoption, said Martha Farnsworth Riche, a demographer
and former head of the Census Bureau.
'WE DON'T HATE KIDS'
Hare said she and other childless friends often are incorrectly
tagged as "kid-haters."
"It's just difficult to explain to people that we
don't hate kids, it's just that we don't want our own," she said.
The percentage of women 40 to 44 - those at the end of their
childbearing years - who have not given birth has hovered around
18 percent since 1994, but that's up from 10 percent in 1976.
Non-high school graduates and those with bachelor's degrees
were most likely to be childless. Also women with higher incomes
had the highest childless rates, in part a reflection of the
increased professional options available to them, said David
Popenoe, co-director of the National Marriage Project, a research
group at Rutgers University.
Amy Caizza, study director for the Institute for Women's Policy
Research, a Washington think tank, said society's attitudes
about childless women also have changed.
"Economic reasons are part of it, but it's also the
effect of the women's movement, that you don't have to be a
mother to
be a complete woman," she said.
MORE NEVER-MARRIED MOMS
Just over half of Asian women were childless, the highest rate
among race and ethnic groups. It was 46 percent for non-Hispanic
whites, 39 percent for blacks and 36 percent for Hispanics.
Last year about 33 percent of all births were to unmarried
women, roughly the same rate since 1998, said Census Bureau
demographer Barbara Downs. Blacks were more likely than Hispanics
or whites to have out-of-wedlock births.
Roughly 23 percent of the 25.8 million never-married women
15 to 44 were mothers in 2002, about the same rate from 1998
but up from 18 percent of the 20.7 million never-married women
in 1990. There was a pronounced increase among never-married
women in managerial or professional jobs who were mothers -
the percentage has nearly doubled from 9 percent in 1990 to
16 percent in 2002.
Many women in these occupations can earn salaries that enable
them to raise a child on their own if they choose, Riche said.
"In earlier days, you had stigma and economic reasons" for
these unmarried, professional women not to have kids, she said. "It's
much less so now."
Also, about 8 percent of births were to women in unmarried
partnerships, the first time the bureau had tracked such a
category in the survey.
DECLINING BIRTH RATE
The report also showed a birth rate of 61 births per 1,000
women 15 to 44 in 2002, down from 67 per 1,000 in 1990. During
the same period, it also found the birth rate for women 15
to 19 rose from 40 per 1,000 to 56 per 1,000.
That's far different from National Center for Health Statistics
data, which in 2001 showed the birth rate for 15- to 19-year-olds
at 45 per 1,000, declining steadily since 1990 from 60 per
1,000.
Government researchers, academics and the National Campaign
to Prevent Teen Pregnancy, an advocacy group, said they considered
NCHS birth data more accurate because it is based on official
vital records from hospitals.
The census report was based on a survey of 50,000 homes.
© 2003
Associated Press.
MSNBC
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