从人口角度看塞尔维亚育龄妇女的无子女现象

Q3 Social Sciences
G. Penev, B. Stanković
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在过去的几十年里,欧洲在生育领域发生了社会、经济和文化的变化,伴随而来的是永久无子女的增加。塞尔维亚1968年出生的女性中无子女的比例为12%,略低于欧洲平均水平(14%)。本文的目的是更详细地探讨塞尔维亚无子女水平和15-49岁无活产妇女的特征。分析了60年间(1961-2020年)按5个年龄组无子女的变化情况。从教育程度、婚姻状况、年龄等方面对1991 - 2011年育龄无子女妇女的基本特征进行了观察。本文基于人口普查和人口动态统计数据。作者介绍了两个新的无子女指标:一般无子女率(GChR),即没有活产的妇女在15-49岁女性总人口中的比例,以及特定年龄的无子女率(ASChR),即按年龄划分的无子女妇女的百分比。按年龄划分的累积生育率变化受母亲生育行为的影响较小,而受无子女妇女比例增加的影响更大。1991年以前,塞尔维亚的一般无子女率相对稳定。自那以后,这一比例急剧上升(从1991年的30.1%到2011年的41.6%,再到2020年的43.4%)。无子女人数的增加主要是由于推迟生育第一胎,但45-49岁女性中永久无子女人数的增加也是原因之一。所有年龄组都推迟了第一胎生育,ASChR全面增加。在塞尔维亚,2020年,所有5岁年龄组的ASChR都达到了创纪录的水平(30-34岁妇女为36.5%,35-39岁妇女为21.4%),永久无子女水平也达到了创纪录的水平(45-49岁妇女为13.8%)。本文还分析了受教育程度和婚姻状况对无子女的影响。根据人口普查数据(1991年、2002年和2011年),没有接受过正规教育的妇女和没有接受过正规教育的妇女的总体无子女率最低。我完成了小学教育,在接受过小学教育的女性中最高。在三四十岁的女性中,无子女率尤其高。婚姻状况对无子女水平的影响也得到了证实。单身女性的GChR至少是已婚女性的10倍。单身女性的GChR从96%到89%不等,而已婚女性的GChR总是略高于8%。直接标准化结果显示,1991 - 2011年15-49岁女性受教育程度和婚姻状况的变化对无子女水平的影响更大,与年龄结构变化的影响完全相反。婚姻结构变化的巨大影响也表明可能对减少塞尔维亚无子女现象产生一定影响。由于婚姻的减少并没有伴随着稳定的婚外结合的增加,这是什么?为年轻人独立生活和组建婚姻创造更有利的环境可能有助于减少生育的推迟,从而减少育龄期间和育龄结束时的无子女现象。考虑到家庭和儿童在塞尔维亚受到高度重视,这一点尤其重要。应当指出,30-34岁和35-39岁年龄组中没有子女的妇女所占比例很高,而且还在不断增加,这限制了减少长期无子女现象的可能性,特别是在不久的将来。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Childlessness among women of reproductive age in Serbia from a demographic perspective
The social, economic, and cultural changes that have taken place in Europe in the past few decades in the field of fertility have been accompanied by an increase in permanent childlessness. The childlessness level among women born in 1968 is 12% in Serbia, slightly below the European average (14%). The aim of this paper is to explore in more detail the level of childlessness in Serbia and the characteristics of women aged 15-49 without live births. Changes in childlessness over a 60-year period (1961-2020) by five-year age groups were analysed. The basic characteristics of childless women of reproductive age by education, marital status, and age were observed from 1991 to 2011. The paper is based on census and vital statistics data. The authors introduce two new indicators of childlessness: the general childlessness rate (GChR) as the share of women without live births in the total female population aged 15-49, and the age-specific childlessness rate (ASChR) as the percentage of childless women by age. Changes in cumulative fertility rates by age were less influenced by the reproductive behaviour of mothers and much more by an increase in the proportion of childless women. The general childlessness rate until 1991 was relatively stable in Serbia. Since then, it has increased intensely (from 30.1% in 1991 to 41.6% in 2011, and 43.4% in 2020). The increase in childlessness is largely a consequence of the postponement of first births, but also of the increase in permanent childlessness among women aged 45-49. The postponement of first births has occured in all age groups and the ASChR has increased across the board. In Serbia, in 2020, the ASChR reached record values for all five-year age groups (36.5% for women aged 30-34, 21.4% for ages 35-39), as did the level of permanent childlessness (13.8% for ages 45-49). The paper also analyses childlessness by education and marital status. According to census data (1991, 2002, and 2011), the general childlessness rate is lowest among women without any formal education and those who haven?t completed primary school, and highest among women with a primary education. Childlessness rates are particularly high among women in their thirties and forties. The influence of marital status on the level of childlessness was also confirmed. The GChR of single women was at least 10 times higher than the value for ever married women. The GChR ranged from 96% to 89% for single women and invariably slightly above 8% for ever married women. The results of direct standardization showed the greater importance of the changes that occurred between 1991 and 2011 by education and marital status of women aged 15-49 on the childlessness level, as well as their completely opposite effects compared to those caused by the change in the age structure. The large impact of changes in marital structure also indicates the possibility of a certain influence on reducing childlessness in Serbia. As the decreasein marriage is not accompanied by a higher prevalence of stable extramarital unions, it?s possible that the creation of more favourable circumstances for an independent life for young people and for forming a union could contribute to reducing the postponement of childbearing, and thus reducing childlessness during and at the end of the reproductive age. This is especially important considering that family and children are highly valued in Serbia. It should be noted that the high and growing shares of women without children in the 30-34 and 35-39 age groups limit the possibilities of reducing permanent childlessness, particularly in the near future.
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来源期刊
Stanovnistvo
Stanovnistvo Social Sciences-Social Sciences (all)
CiteScore
0.60
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0.00%
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7
审稿时长
15 weeks
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