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Family
Formation in Ireland.
Trends, Data Needs and Implications
(December 2001), ISBN 0 7070 0205 2, Policy Research
Series (PRS) No.43
Dr. Tony Fahey and Dr. Helen Russell
Press
Release
Embargo: Wednesday, 6 February 2002, 10.00 am
Family
Formation in Ireland. Trends, Data Needs and Implications
Mr. Dermot Ahern, T.D., Minister for Social,
Community and Family Affairs will launch a new report from the
ESRI on Wednesday, 6 February, 2002. The report outlines trends
in fertility rates, lone parenthood and household size in Ireland
over recent years. It also points to areas where available information
on family patterns is inadequate and needs to be expanded.
Key
findings:
A
surge in new family formation has occurred in Ireland since the
onset of economic boom in 1994. Between 1994 and 2000, the number
of first births increased by 29 per cent. The increase was such
that the number of first births in 2000 was the highest on record.
Rising
birth numbers are largely accounted for by increases in the number
of women of child-bearing age. The fertility rate, which links
the number of births to the number of women of child-bearing age,
has remained relatively stable during the 1990s (at approximately
1.9 births per woman).
The
stabilisation of Irish fertility rates in the 1990s is significant
as it brought to a halt the steady decline in fertility rates
which had been underway for the previous twenty years. Though
the fertility levels at which this stabilisation has occurred
are low by Irish historical standards, they are reasonably high
by European standards. Ireland continues to have more-or-less
the highest fertility rate in Europe. However, for the past decade
Irish fertility rates have been below those of the USA and New
Zealand. Both these countries have had a stronger fertility record
in the 1990s than any country in Europe.
The
share of births in Ireland occurring outside of marriage has risen
from 5 per cent in 1980 to 32 per cent in 2000. Systematic information
is lacking on the partnership circumstances of the parents of
children born outside marriage. Patterns elsewhere, along with
limited evidence for Ireland, would suggest that large proportions
are in cohabiting unions, that many enter marriage after the birth
of the child, and that solo parenthood may be relatively uncommon
among them.
Following
over 20 years of steady decline, the number of marriages increased
from 1997 onwards, rising by 23 per cent between then and the
year 2000.
About
12 per cent of children aged under 15 are in lone parent families.
This represents almost a doubling of the extent of lone parent
families since the early 1980s, though difficulties with the data
mean that counts lone parenthood remain somewhat uncertain.
Marital
breakdown and non-marital births are now the most common routes
into lone parenthood. Widowhood accounts now accounts for something
less than one in ten of lone parents, though since different data
sources give somewhat different breakdowns of the marital status
of lone parents, it is not possible to be precise on this issue.
Little information is available on the role of the absent
parent in lone parent families, and this constitutes a major gap
in the data on the subject.
The
great majority of lone parents are women and these tend to have
lower levels of education than married mothers in the same age
group. Unmarried and separated lone mothers are more likely to
participate in the labour market than married mothers with similar
characteristics. This is due mainly to the high participation
of lone mothers in jobs provided under the Community Employment
programme.
While
existing data give extensive information on certain aspects of
family formation in Ireland, there are important gaps. Guidance
for policy on family issues is hampered as a result. The study
thus highlights the need for an expansion of data collection in
this area in the future.
Members of the Press are invited to attend the Press Briefing
in the Italian Room, Government Buildings, Merrion St., Dublin
2, on Wednesday, 6 February 2002, 10.00 am
For further information contact:
Dr.Tony Fahey, ESRI, Tel. 01-6671525 (office), 087-6535325 (mobile).
Dr.Helen
Russell, ESRI, Tel. 01-6671525 (office)
Copies of the report may be purchased from the ESRI (Tel. 01-6671525;
e-mail: admin@esri.ie ). Price: €16. For further information
on this publication, click
here.
Family
Formation in Ireland. Trends, Data Needs and Implications
(December 2001), ISBN 0 7070 0205 2, Policy Research Series (PRS)
No.43 Dr.Tony Fahey and Dr.Helen Russell
To
download a summary of this publication in Acrobat pdf format click
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