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Amara Bachu
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                Record Share of New Mothers in Labor Force,
                          Census Bureau Reports

  Of the 3.7 million women with infants under the age of 1 in 1998, 59
percent were in the labor force a record high and almost double the 31
percent participation rate of 1976, according to a report released today
by the Commerce Department's Census Bureau.

  In June 1998, Census Bureau data showed that of the 3.7 million women
with infants, 36 percent were working full-time, 17 percent were working
part-time and 6 percent were actively seeking employment.

  Of the 31.3 million mothers who were without infants and between the
ages of 15 to 44, 73 percent were in the labor force in 1998, with 52
percent working full-time, 17 percent working part-time and 4 percent
unemployed.

  "The large increase in labor force participation rates by mothers since
1976 is an important reason why child-care issues have been so visible in
recent years," said Amara Bachu, co-author with Martin O'Connell of
Fertility of American Women: June 1998.

  In 1998, for the first time since the Census Bureau started recording
fertility information, families with children in which both spouses worked
became the majority (51 percent) of all married-couple families, compared
with 33 percent in 1976.

  Other highlights from the report:

  - The annual fertility rate in the United States in 1900 stood at
    almost 4.0 births per woman, fell to 2.2 during the Great Depression,
    bounced back to a postwar peak of 3.7 in 1957, and fell again by half
    to 1.8 births in the mid-1980s. With minor fluctuations, the rate has
    remained at about 2.0 births per woman over the last 20 years.

  - Women 40 to 44 years old in 1998 are ending their childbearing
    years with an average of 1.9 children. This contrasts sharply with
    women in 1976, who averaged 3.1 births.

  - Among women 40 to 44 years old in 1998, only Hispanic women,
    with an average of 2.4 births each, had exceeded the level required
    for natural replacement of the population (about 2.1 births per
    woman). African American women (2.0 births per woman) and Asian and
    Pacific Islander women (2.0 births) had fertility levels not
    significantly different from the replacement level, while White
    non-Hispanic women (1.8 births) were significantly below replacement
    level.

  - Foreign-born women 40 to 44 years old complete their childbearing
    years with an average of 2.2 children each, not significantly
    different from replacement-level fertility. Women born in this country
    averaged 1.8 children each.

  - Among all women ages 40 to 44, those who were childless increased from
    10 percent in 1976 to 19 percent in 1998. In the 12 months preceding
    the June 1998 survey, 1.1 million women gave birth out of wedlock,
    representing 31 percent of all births during this period. About 86
    percent of births to teenagers in 1998 were out of wedlock.

  Data are from the June 1998 supplement to the Current Population
Survey. Statistics from surveys are subject to sampling and nonsampling
error.

-X-
Source: U.S. Census Bureau
Public Information Office
301-763-3030

Last Revised: March 14, 2001 at 09:09:23 AM