1. Main points
The average completed family size for women born in 1969, and reaching age 45 in 2014, was 1.91 children per woman. This compares with their mothers’ generation, represented by women born in 1942, who had 2.29 children on average
Two children was the most common family size for women born in both 1942 and 1969
The level of childlessness among women born in 1969 (18%) is higher than for women born in 1942 (11%). One in 10 women born in 1969 had 4 or more children, compared with around 1 in 6 women born in 1942
Women born in 1984 – the most recent cohort to reach age 30 - have had slightly fewer children on average (1.02) by their 30th birthday than women born in 1969 who had 1.12 children by the same age
2. Introduction
This release previously called "Cohort Fertility" was renamed as “Childbearing for women born in different years” in 2013 and presents statistics on childbearing among women in England and Wales. These figures are presented by the year of birth of mother – for groups of women born in the same year - rather than by the year of birth of child. The estimates have been updated with 2014 births, the latest data available, which means that completed family size for women born in 1969 (women reaching age 45 in 2014) is presented for the first time. Although the release is now called “Childbearing for women born in different years” we shall be using the word “cohort” at places within the text for simplicity. A cohort in this statistical bulletin is a technical word to describe a group of women born in the same year.
This statistical bulletin provides supporting commentary for the release, which includes data tables on:
average number of live-born children by age and year of birth of woman, 1920 to 1999
proportion of women who have had at least one live birth, by age and year of birth of woman, 1920 to 1999 - the proportion of women who have not had children (see childlessness definition) is also shown in this table
percentage distribution of women of childbearing age by number of live-born children, by age and year of birth of woman, 1920 to 1995
age-specific fertility rates by age and year of birth of woman, 1920 to 1999
3. What is cohort fertility?
A cohort is a group of people having experienced a particular event (birth or marriage, for example) during the same period. In this bulletin birth is the event considered; therefore the cohort will be called a birth cohort, for example, the 1984 female birth cohort will refer to all women born during the year 1984 in England and Wales.
Cohort fertility analyses explore whether current generations of women of childbearing age are reaching, exceeding or falling short of the fertility levels of previous generations. This bulletin contains statistics on changes in average family size for past and present cohorts, levels of childlessness for different cohorts of women and the proportions of women having 1, 2 or more children.
The main cohort presented here is women born in 1969, who were aged 45 in 2014. This is the most recent cohort that is assumed to have completed their childbearing1. This statistical bulletin compares the completed family size of women born in 1969 with that of their mothers’ generation; the average age of mothers giving birth in 1969 was 27 years and women of that age were assumed to be born in 1942.
Women born in 1984, who have reached age 30 in 2014, are also used as a comparison group, as age 302 may be considered the mid-point of a woman’s childbearing years which are assumed to start at age 15 and end at the age 45. This bulletin compares the achieved fertility of the 1984 cohort by this age with that of previous cohorts by the same age.
Notes for what is cohort fertility?
A woman is assumed to have completed her childbearing by the last day she is aged 45, that is by her 46th birthday (exact age 46). Completed fertility includes fertility rates up to and including age 45. See background note 4 for a more technical explanation
The ages of women are presented in 'exact years'. Therefore figures should be interpreted as the average number of children a woman has had up to that birthday. So childbearing up to exact age 30 includes cumulative fertility through her lifetime up to the day before her 30th birthday. Any childbearing in the 12 months from her 29th birthday onwards will be included in fertility up to exact age 30. See background note 4 for a more technical explanation
4. Main figures
Table A shows the average family size and estimated family size distribution for women who have completed their childbearing years in 2014 and of the cohort assumed to be their mothers. The 1942 cohort is assumed to be their mothers' generation because the average age of mothers giving birth in 1969 was 27 years and so women of that age were assumed to be born in 1942.
This comparison of the most recent cohort to have finished their childbearing with their mothers' cohort lets us examine change over time. The completed family size of the 1969 cohort is much smaller than for the 1942 cohort and the proportion of women remaining childless is substantially higher for the 1969 cohort.
Table A: Average family size and estimated family size distribution for women who have completed their childbearing, by year of birth of woman, selected cohorts
England and Wales | |||||||
Year of birth of woman2 | Average completed family size | Number of live-born children (%)1 | |||||
0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4+ | Total3 | ||
1942 | 2.29 | 11 | 13 | 38 | 22 | 16 | 100 |
1969 | 1.91 | 18 | 17 | 37 | 18 | 10 | 100 |
Source: Office for National Statistics | |||||||
1. Percentage of women with 0, 1, 2, 3 or 4+ children who have completed their families | |||||||
2. The 1969 cohort is the latest group assumed to have completed their childbearing. The 1942 cohort is assumed to be their mothers' generation because the average age of mothers giving birth in 1969 was 27 years, and women of that age were born in 1942 | |||||||
3. Figures may not add exactly due to rounding |
Download this table Table A: Average family size and estimated family size distribution for women who have completed their childbearing, by year of birth of woman, selected cohorts
.xls (54.8 kB)Changing family size
This interactive application allows you to engage with “Childbearing for women born in different years” and explore how women born in the same year as you compare to women born in the same year as your mother.
Average family size
Figure 1 shows the average number of live-born children (completed family size) for women who are assumed to have completed their childbearing. This is a cumulative measure derived from summing the fertility rates of female birth cohorts at each age from 15 to 45 and over. The most recent cohort to complete their childbearing (women born in 1969) had on average 1.91 children, similar to recent previous 3 cohorts (1965 to 1967). Average completed family size peaked at 2.42 children for women born in 1935, and has been falling since. Women belonging to the 1958 cohort were the first estimated to have an average completed family size of fewer than 2 children over their childbearing lifetime. This decrease in the average family size is mainly due to rising levels of childlessness, which is discussed further in the next section.
Figure 1: Average number of live-born children by age 30 and completed family size, by year of birth of woman
England and Wales, 1920 to 1985
Source: Office for National Statistics
Download this image Figure 1: Average number of live-born children by age 30 and completed family size, by year of birth of woman
.png (116.4 kB) .xls (33.3 kB)Figure 1 also shows the average number of live-born children for women by their 30th birthday.
The average number of children women have had up to their 30th birthday can give an indication of more recent trends in family size. Figure 1 shows a slight upturn in average family size by the 30th birthday for the most recent cohorts, from 0.98 children for the 1978 cohort to 1.02 for the 1984 cohort. This is mainly because women born in 1984 had higher fertility rates in their late twenties than those born in 1978. There is no single explanation for this increase, but possible reasons include the changes in support for families introduced by previous governments (such as tax credits and maternity or paternity leave)1 and the increasing proportion of women aged 25-29 who were born outside the UK (with fertility above the UK born average)2.
Overall, women born in the 1960s and 1970s have had fewer children by age 30 than previous generations. The 1969 cohort had 1.12 children on average by their 30th birthday, compared with 1.86 by the same age for their mother’s generation, the 1942 cohort. This reflects their postponement of childbearing to older ages, for reasons including:
increased participation in higher education3
delayed marriage and partnership formation1
the desire to establish a career, get on the housing ladder and ensure financial stability before starting a family1
Notes for main figures
Jefferies, J (2008), Fertility assumptions for the 2006-based national population projections, Population Trends, no 131, pp 18-27
Zumpe, J, Dormon, O, and Jefferies, J (2012) Childbearing among UK born and non-UK born women living in the UK. Office for National Statistics
Dormon, O (2014) Childbearing of UK and non-UK born women living in the UK, 2011 Census data. Office for National Statistics
Ni, Bhrolchain, M, Beaujouan, E (2012) Fertility postponement is largely due to rising educational enrolment, Population Studies, Volume 66, issue 3, pp. 311-327
5. Childlessness
Childlessness is defined as the condition of being without children. There are 2 distinguishable types of childlessness, voluntary and involuntary. The difference between the 2 is mostly self-defined. Voluntary childlessness, also described as childfree, child-free, childless by choice or childfree by choice1, relates to women who have chosen not to have children. Involuntary childlessness relates to women who are without a child because of circumstance or biology rather than choice.
We publish data on all childless women, whether by circumstance or by choice. This is in line with the United Nations definition of childlessness2:
Childlessness is estimated as the proportion of women who have not had a live birth by a specific age.
Figure 2: Percentage of women remaining childless by their 30th birthday and completion of childbearing, by year of birth of woman
England and Wales, 1920 to 1985
Source: Office for National Statistics
Notes:
- The percentage of women remaining childless by their 30th birthday or by age 45 is calculated as 1 minus the proportion of women who have had at least one live birth by age, multiplied by 100
- This calculation takes into account all first live births from a woman's teenage years through to the last day she is 29 (the day before her 30th birthday) or the last day she is 45 (the day before her 46th birthday)
Download this image Figure 2: Percentage of women remaining childless by their 30th birthday and completion of childbearing, by year of birth of woman
.png (17.7 kB) .xls (45.1 kB)Figure 2 shows that the level of childlessness at age 45 for women born in 1969, is relatively high compared to their mother’s cohort at 18%, but slightly lower than for the 1967 cohort (19%) and the previous 6 cohorts, which had 20% childlessness each. Around 1 in 5 women born in 1969 remained childless by the end of their childbearing years compared with 1 in 9 women born in 1942. However, late 1960s levels are not new; they are comparable to early 1920s levels. A wide range of explanations relating to circumstances and choices have been put forward for the increasing childlessness seen in recent cohorts. These include the decline in the proportion of women married, changes in the perceived costs and benefits of childrearing versus work and leisure activities, greater social acceptability of the childfree lifestyle and the postponement of decisions about whether to have children until it may be biologically too late1.
On their 30th birthday, 47% of the 1984 cohort were childless, a higher proportion than for the 1969 cohort at the same age (43%). This highlights the trend that women have been increasingly delaying having children to older ages. However, Figure 2 shows that while the proportion of women childless by age 30 increased slightly for women born in 1984, prior to that it had been falling for successive cohorts born from 1975 to 1982 (when 48% of women had not yet had a live birth by age 30). However, it is too early to say whether this new upward trend will continue.
Notes for childlessness
For reasons for increasing childlessness, see for example:
- O'Leary L, Natamba E, Jefferies J and Wilson, B (2010) Fertility and partnership status in the last two decades, Population Trends 140, page 5-35
- Simpson, R (2009) Delayed childbearing and childlessness in Britain, in Stillwell, J, Kneale, D and Coast, E (eds.) Fertility, Living Arrangements, Care and Mobility: Understanding Population Trends and Processes Volume 1, Springer, Dordrecht, pp. 23-40
- Kneale, D, Joshi H (2008) Postponement and childlessness: Evidence from two British cohorts volume 19, article 58, (2008)
- Basten, S (2009). Voluntary childlessness and being Childfree. The Future of Human Reproduction: Working Paper #5
- Berrington, A.M. (2004). Perpetual postponers? Women's, men's and couple's fertility intentions and subsequent fertility behaviour. Population Trends 117: 9-19
6. Teenage childbearing
Figure 3: Percentage of women who have had a child by their 20th birthday, by year of birth of woman
England and Wales, 1920 to 1995
Source: Office for National Statistics
Download this chart Figure 3: Percentage of women who have had a child by their 20th birthday, by year of birth of woman
Image .csv .xlsFigure 3 shows that the proportion of women who have a child by age 20 has been gradually decreasing for recent cohorts. From a peak of around 1 in 5 for women born in 1952, it has declined to 1 in 12 women for those born in 1994, the most recent cohort to reach age 20. This shows that the proportion of women becoming teenage mothers is falling, though the level of teenage motherhood remains slightly above that of the cohorts born in the early 1920s when around 7% of women had a child by age 20. This fall in the proportion of teenagers becoming mothers has accompanied recent falls in the annual number of teenage conceptions.
Conception statistics include all pregnancies of women usually resident in England and Wales which lead to either a live birth, still birth or an abortion under the 1967 Abortion Act. The most recent figures on under-18 conception rates for England and Wales show that in 2013 the rate was 24.5 conceptions per thousand women aged 15 to 17, which is the lowest level since records began in 1969 (a decrease of over 40% since then)1. Teenage conception and birth rates are used widely as outcome indicators in the sexual health context1.
Notes for teenage childbearing
More details on teenage conceptions can be found in our annual conceptions release:
7. Number of children
Figure 4: Estimated family size distribution for women born between 1920 and 1969 who are assumed to have completed their childbearing
England and Wales, 1920 to 1969
Source: Office for National Statistics
Download this chart Figure 4: Estimated family size distribution for women born between 1920 and 1969 who are assumed to have completed their childbearing
Image .csv .xlsThe traditional 2-child family remains the most common family type in England and Wales, with 37% of women born in 1969 having 2 children (Figure 4, Table B). Families with none or 3 children are equally second most common at 18% each of the total for the 1969 cohort. The proportion of families with 1 child has increased over time to 17%, equal with the 1968 cohort and a level not previously seen since the 1932 cohort.
Table B: Average family size and estimated family size distribution for women who are assumed to have completed their childbearing, by year of birth of woman, 1920 to 1969
England and Wales | |||||||
Year of birth of woman | Average Family Size | Number of live-born children (%)1 | Total2 | ||||
Childless | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4+ | |||
1920 | 2.00 | 21 | 21 | 27 | 16 | 15 | 100 |
1925 | 2.12 | 17 | 22 | 28 | 17 | 16 | 100 |
1930 | 2.35 | 13 | 18 | 30 | 19 | 20 | 100 |
1935 | 2.42 | 12 | 15 | 32 | 21 | 20 | 100 |
1940 | 2.36 | 11 | 13 | 36 | 22 | 18 | 100 |
1945 | 2.19 | 10 | 14 | 43 | 21 | 12 | 100 |
1950 | 2.07 | 14 | 13 | 44 | 20 | 10 | 100 |
1955 | 2.02 | 16 | 13 | 41 | 19 | 11 | 100 |
1960 | 1.98 | 19 | 12 | 38 | 20 | 11 | 100 |
1965 | 1.91 | 20 | 13 | 38 | 19 | 10 | 100 |
1969 | 1.91 | 18 | 17 | 37 | 18 | 10 | 100 |
Source: Office for National Statistics | |||||||
Notes: | |||||||
1. Percentage of women with 0, 1, 2, 3 or, 4+ children who have completed their childbearing | |||||||
2. Figures may not add exactly due to rounding |
Download this table Table B: Average family size and estimated family size distribution for women who are assumed to have completed their childbearing, by year of birth of woman, 1920 to 1969
.xls (55.8 kB)Table B shows the family sizes of women who are assumed to have completed their childbearing.
The latest cohort to complete their childbearing were those women born in 1969, who were aged 45 in 2014. Of this cohort roughly 18 percent remained childless. This compares with the 1945 cohort where only approximately 10 percent of women remained childless.
17% of women completing their childbearing in 2014 had 1 child, continuing a rise over the last few years from 13% in the 1965 cohort. One child families were more common among women born in the 1920s and 1930s, where as many as 22% had 1 child. Of the cohorts of women born in the 1940s, 10 to 14% had 1 child by the age of 45, slightly lower levels than for women completing childbearing in 2014.
Two children has remained the most popular family size. After peaking around 1950, with 44% of women having two children, it stabilised at 38% for cohorts born through the 1960s before declining slightly to 37% for the 1967-69 cohorts.
A woman born in 1940 was more likely to have 1, 3 or, ‘4 or more’ children than not to have any. Only one in ten women born in 1969 had four or more children, compared with nearly 1 in 5 in the 1940 cohort (Table B).
Back to table of contents8. The changing age pattern of fertility
The fertility rates of selected cohorts at particular age milestones highlight how the age distribution of women giving birth has changed over time. As an example, the 2 vertical lines on Figure 5 allow a comparison of the age profile of fertility in the 1969 cohort (who have completed their childbearing), their mothers’ generation (cohort of 1942) and that of the 1984 cohort to date. The fertility rates for women at ages 20, 25, 30, 35 and 40 have been chosen for illustration here (Figure 5), but equally any age or selection of ages could be charted.
Figure 5: Age-specific fertility rates at selected ages, by year of birth of woman, 1920 to 1994
England and Wales
Source: Office for National Statistics
Notes:
- Age-specific fertility rates are a measure of fertility specific to the age of the mother, and are useful for comparing the reproductive behaviour of women at different ages. They are calculated by dividing the number of live births in a year to mothers of each age group by the number of females in the mid-year population of that age. Rates can be expressed per 1,000 women in the age group
Download this image Figure 5: Age-specific fertility rates at selected ages, by year of birth of woman, 1920 to 1994
.png (25.6 kB) .xls (24.1 kB)For the 1969 cohort, the highest fertility rate of those shown was at the age of 30, closely followed by age 25. Lower levels of fertility were recorded at ages 20 and 35, while the number of live births per 1,000 women at the age of 40 was lower still. On average, the 1969 cohort reached 1.91 children per woman. In comparison with the 1942 cohort, the 1969 cohort had much lower fertility at ages 20 and 25, though at age 30 fertility rates were similar. At older ages, the 1969 generation had higher fertility, as shown at ages 35 and 40 (Figure 5). However, this recuperation at older ages was not sufficient to catch up with the larger completed family size of the 1942 cohort who had 2.29 children per woman on average.
Age-specific fertility rates for the 1984 cohort are currently only available up to the age of 30. For this cohort, fertility rates at age 30 were a little higher than for the 1969 cohort but decreased slightly from the level experienced by the 1982 cohort. In contrast, fertility rates at age 20 were slightly lower than seen in the 1969 cohort, while at the age of 25 they were much lower for the 1984 cohort than for the 1969 cohort.
Fertility at age 25 hit a low for women born in 1977 before rising slightly among cohorts born between 1978 and 1987. Women born in 1984 had 12% fewer live births per 1,000 women at age 25 than women born in 1969.
If recent trends in childbearing at older ages continue, the 1984 cohort would be expected to have an older average age at childbearing than the 1969 cohort.
Back to table of contents9. Uses of birth statistics
We use birth statistics to:
produce mid-year population estimates and population projections, both national and subnational
quality assure census estimates
report on social and demographic trends
Other main users of birth statistics include the Department for Education and the Department of Health, academics, demographers, health researchers, lobby groups, international organisations and the media.
We use Cohort fertility statistics and estimates of fertility by family size for producing the fertility component of population projections and for reporting on social and demographic trends. They are also of important interest to academics researching changing family building patterns over time.
The Department for Work and Pensions uses information on family size for modelling future lone parents, pensions and benefits.
Estimates of childlessness are of interest to policymakers concerned with the support and care available to people at older ages. Estimates of family size are of use to special interest groups such as organisations and networks supporting large families and for people who are, or who have, an only child.
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