by  Marina Adshade
  
It is impossible for me to think about Easter  without thinking about estrus – the peak of female sexuality that takes  place when a woman is most fertile. It should be our favourite time of  the month and it is good that we honour that every year with this  excellent weekend in celebration of fertility. Hard boiled eggs, chicks,  bunnies are not things that I think about mid-cycle, but for those who  are trying to reproduce (as opposed to desperately trying not to  reproduce) these are apt symbols.
So Easter is a good time to talk about fertility, a subject  that has fascinated economists ever since Malthus pointed out in the  1780’s that breeding like rabbits was not in the best interests of  humanity. As most of us know, fertility is currently at an extremely low  level with most of the developed world countries, and in some of the  developing world countries, people are not having enough children to  sustain the population. What you may not know though is that this fall  in fertility is not the result of the introduction of the birth control  pill in the 1960’s, but is rather the continuation of a trend that began  200 years ago – before contraceptives were even available.
Before we begin, here is a brief history of contraceptive  technology. Before the cervical cap introduced around 1838 there was no  real technology that could be used to prevent pregnancy. Sure, Casanova  was rumoured to have encouraged the use of hollowed out lemons to  prevent pregnancy but I can’t imagine that many woman thought that was a  “fun idea”. In the 1850’s, thanks to the efforts of Charles Goodyear to  vulcanize rubber, condoms became available that were fairly inexpensive  and effective at preventing pregnancy. Diaphragms went on the market in  1882 followed by the IUD in 1909. The queen of all birth control was  invented in the early 1950’s but didn’t become legally available in the  US until the mid-1960’s and only then thanks to the tireless efforts of  Margaret Sanger who fought to have oral contraceptives legalized.
Why this timeline is interesting is that fertility began to  decline around 1800, long before contraceptives became available. In the  US, for example, fertility fell every decade between 1800 and the  beginning of the baby-boom at the end of the 1930’s; from seven children  per woman in 1800 to two children per woman in 1940. European countries  experienced similar declining fertilities with France, surprisingly,  leading the pack. (Ironically, France is a modern poster child for how  government policy can effectively be used to raise fertility rates)
So how did women accomplish this decline in fertility without  contraceptives? First of all they delayed getting married until their  mid to late twenties, cutting their reproductive years short, or didn’t  marry at all. They practised colitis interruptus which, when faced with  few alternatives, is surprisingly effective. Means for abortions were  available and widely used as was infanticide. Sodomy and intercourse  without ejaculation were also used to control fertility but these  methods were apparently more popular within prostitution than within  marriage.
What makes this an economic story is that all of these  fertility control methods were available pre-1800 meaning that families  in the past could have controlled their fertility more effectively –  they didn’t need to wait for the availability of contraceptives – but  they chose not to. It is when the Industrial Revolution arrived with  increased urbanization, reduced agricultural employment and higher wages  for educated workers that families began to reduce their size in  response to these economic changes.
Contraceptives when seen in this light are not the catalyst for  social change and family sizes are not smaller today because  contraceptives are available. Contraceptives are available because  people wanted smaller families and contraceptives made it possible to  achieve that goal at a lower cost. The fact that the expected number of  children born per woman in her child-bearing years in the US today is  almost exactly the same level today as it was in the mid-1930’s  demonstrates that achieving the current level of fertility was possible  even without the birth control pill.
Murphy, Tommy (2010). “Old Habits Die Hard (Sometimes): Can  département heterogeneity tell us something about the French fertility  decline?” Università Bocconi Working Paper 364.
Greenwood, Jeremy and Ananth Seshadri (2002). “The U.S.  Demographic Transition” American Economic Review, vol. 92(2) pages  153-159.
Source
April 24, 2011
Planned Parenthood Predates the Pill
про что:
birth control,
demography,
history,
pill
Posted by
Борис Денисов
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