Declined Total Fertility Rate Among Immigrants and the Role of Newly Arrived Women in Norway

European Journal of Population = Revue Européenne De Démographie
Marianne Tønnessen

Abstract

In many Western countries, the total fertility rate (TFR) of immigrant women has declined over the last decades. This paper proposes two methods for investigating such changes in the aggregate immigrant fertility level: what-if scenarios and a formal decomposition. Both methods disentangle the effect of changed composition-by origin area and duration of stay-from the effect of changed fertility within subgroups. The methods are applied to data from Norway, where immigrant TFR declined from 2.6 births per women in 2000 to below 2.0 in 2017. The results show that this decline is not due to successful integration, nor changed composition of immigrant women by origin area or duration of stay. A main reason for the decline is found among newly arrived immigrant women, particularly from Asia. They have a considerably lower fertility now than what the newly arrived had 15-20 years ago. After investigating several possible reasons for the TFR decline among the newly arrived, decreased fertility in origin areas is suggested as a key driver.

References

Jul 18, 2009·Population Trends·Nicola TromansJulie Jefferie
Jan 21, 2010·Population Studies·D A Coleman, S Dubuc
Jan 18, 2013·The International Migration Review·Daniel T LichterAllison Churilla
Jun 27, 2013·Population Studies·Alicia Adsera, Ana Ferrer
May 30, 2017·European Journal of Population = Revue Européenne De Démographie·Elisabeth K Kraus, Teresa Castro-Martín

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