I think she's confusing the relative change in fertility within income groups (it's dropping faster for lower income women) with absolute numbers. Well educated women still have lower TFR and higher childlessness rates overall.https://twitter.com/CathyYoung63/status/1005366954381758464 …
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Or, possibly, the trends are changing? If that was the only factor the new cohort of younger, less educated women would offset more births among older more educated ones. Also, is there any evidence these older educated women are having fewer children than they want?
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If anything your explanation suggests that delaying childbearing is not a problem
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Well it's a problem if it ends up lowering the total number of children that women will have over the course of their childbearing years. If your most fertile cohort is the 30-34 age group, then that seems likely to happen
End of conversation
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