Families grow stronger as they can “build” upon prior generations. Whether it is faith or wealth, parents can strengthen the next generation by what they say or do, and strong families strengthen communities, states, and nations.
Babies
are necessary to build families. Any time that a couple decides not to have
children, they are decreasing the size of their family for all future
generations. If a couple has two children and one of the two children does not
marry and have children, the posterity for that family is cut in half. If the
pattern continues in future generations, it will not take long for the family
to disappear. Family continuance is one reason that birthrate matters.
Another
reason birthrate matters is national security. As the birthrate drops, there
are fewer individuals willing to defend the country. A third reason birthrate
matters is care for older generations. If there are no younger generations, who
cares for the elderly? There are other reasons, but all of them deserve study
and better understanding.
The
important thing to take from this essay is that the birth rate continues to
fall in the United States, and this is not a good thing. In her article
published in The Daily Signal, Rachel Sheffield
explained “The Real Reason America’s Birth Rate Keeps Falling.”
Birth
rates in the U.S. continue to fall, according to the latest data from the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
U.S.
birth rates have been steadily declining for more than a decade now, and the
total fertility rate (the number of births a woman is projected to have over
her lifetime) has continued to hit new lows for several years.
The
preliminary data released this month from the CDC suggest the downward trend in
fertility continued in 2025. The birth rate dropped from 53.8 births per 1,000
women in 2024 to 53.1 in 2025, and the total number of births declined by 22,534.
Some
media outlets and scholars say the drop in birth rates is good news, and that
it is driven by declining teen births as well as by women in their 20s delaying
relationships and motherhood until they are more financially and emotionally
prepared. They argue births will be made up for down the road.
The
reality is not so rosy, though. Teen births did decline, but the overall drop
in the birth rate is driven mostly by a declining share of Americans marrying
and forming families at all. Declining births among women in their 20s are not
being made up for later on either, as marriage is delayed ever further into the
life course.
Examining
the change in birth rates by age:
·
Birth
rates among teenage young women dropped, particularly among older teens (ages
18-19).
·
The
largest decreases in birth rates were among women in their 20s.
·
Birth
rates among women age 30 and over increased, or in some cases remained steady
(among women ages 45-54).
Yes,
it is true that teen birth rates fell, which is good news, particularly when we
are talking about minor-aged teens. But teen births are too small a share of
total births these days to move the needle of the overall birth rate much at
all. This is especially the case if you look only at births to minor-aged teen
women, the group we should be most concerned about.
Teen
births peaked in the early 1990s, after rising for several years. Since then,
they have declined drastically, a positive and remarkable reversal. Today, teen
births are a small fraction of U.S. births.
In
fact, if we had only seen the declines in teen births while the birth rates
among other women had remained stable (no decreases among women in their 20s
and not even increases among women ages 30 and above), the overall birth rate
would have remained nearly stable.
What
is happening is that an ever-increasing share of people are failing to marry
and have children when they are in their prime childbearing years. With every
passing year, the age of marriage increases, fewer people are marrying, and
that leads to fewer children being born. Delayed marriage reduces the
likelihood of ever marrying. Researchers project that roughly one-third of Gen
Z will not have married by age 45 and may never marry at all.
Married
couples are much more likely to have children. The average number of children
born to married couples has been steady for about three decades, although with
some dip in the last few years. The drop in the birth rate is primarily driven
by a decline in marriage rates.
While
there has been a bump in births among women ages 30 and older – indicating that
some of the decline in births to young women are delayed births rather than
births foregone – the increase in births among women 30 and older are not
enough to make up for the declines in births among younger women.
There
are more consequences to declining marriage than fewer births, too.
Marriage
is a good in itself. Marriage is one of the strongest factors associated with
adult happiness and is also connected with increased household income, better
health, and greater psychological well-being for adults.
Children
raised in married-parent families also do better on these outcomes, as well as
several others: greater educational attainment, lower delinquency rates,
reduced likelihood of abuse.
While
there are some silver linings in the new birth rate data then, including
declining teen births, the underlying story is much bleaker. It’s a story of
declining marriage and family formation. This comes at great cost – including a
shrinking future generation.
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