Race differences in age at first birth and the pace of subsequent fertility: Implications for the minority group status hypothesis

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Abstract

We examine race differences in the effects of age at first birth on the pace of subsequent fertility. If race differences in the pace of fertility persist net of age at first birth and socioeconomic variables, they will be taken as new support for the minority group status hypothesis. Data from the 1973 National Survey of Family Growth are analyzed with the finding that race differences in the pace of fertility are real, giving support to the hypothesis. Implications are drawn suggesting that the proper points at which to examine group differences in fertility are the different stages in the process which culminates in completed fertility, rather than limiting investigation to the final product. © 1982 Population Association of America.

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APA

St. John, C. (1982). Race differences in age at first birth and the pace of subsequent fertility: Implications for the minority group status hypothesis. Demography, 19(3), 301–314. https://doi.org/10.2307/2060973

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