Post-World War II baby boom
Encyclopedia : P : PO : POS : Post-World War II baby boom
As is often the case with a large war, the elation of victory and large numbers of males returning to their country triggered a baby boom after the end of World War II in many countries around the globe, notably those of Europe, Asia, North America, and Australasia.
In the United States, demographers have put the generation's birth years at 1946 to 1964, despite the fact that the U.S. birthrate (per 1,000 population) actually began to decline after 1957. William Strauss and Neil Howe, in their book Generations, include those conceived by soldiers on leave during the war, putting the generation's birth years at 1943 to 1960. (Strauss and Howe base their years on peer personality, not parental fecundity, so their years may not coincide with the actual "boom" demographically.)
The key biological factor is that a woman is fertile only into her mid-forties, and while austerity and restraint were the norms during the stress of the war years in the lives of the various Rosie the Riveters, when the men came home many of those jobs left and marriage became again a cultural and career norm for most women—and one result was babies, which boom continued in the economic glow of the fifties, but dampened its rate as the recession of 1958 sloughed into the following recovery, but petered out as the biological capacity of the boomer parents took their natural course. Simple mathematics governs, a woman married in her mid-to-late twenties after the war ended in August 1945 was infertile twenty-or-so years later. Finer distinctions are statistical, although there is merit in the cultural view of Strauss and Howe, based in the cultural commonalities experienced by the boomers as they have defined them.
Family researcher Allan C. Carlson, editor of The Family in America, has observed that the baby boom was largely a "Catholic thing". "[T]he 1945–1964 era produced a “heroic” flowering of Catholic family life in America. Although fertility rose for all American religious groups, it rose far more rapidly and stayed high longer among Catholics.... The total marital fertility rate for non-Catholics averaged 3.15 children born per woman in the early 1950s and 3.14 in the early 1960s. For Catholics, the respective figures were 3.54 and 4.25."["The Family Factors],"Allan C. Carlson, Touchstone, January/February, 2006
In Canada, the baby boom is usually defined as the generation born from 1947 to 1966—Canadian soldiers were repatriated later than American servicemen, and Canada's birthrate did not start to rise until 1947, and most Canadian demographers prefer to use the later date of 1966 as the boom's end in that country. The United Kingdom experienced a second baby boom during the 1960s, with a peak in births in 1964 and a third (smaller) one in the late 1980s.
The Baby Boom was brought to public attention in 1960, with the publication of Landon Y. Jones' Great Expectations: America and the Baby Boom Generation. That there was a boom is not denied. Live births in the United States surged from 222,721 in January 1946 to 233,452 that May. In October, 339,499 babies were born. By the end of the decade, about 32 million babies had been born, compared with 24 millions in the lean 30s. In 1954, annual births first topped four million and did not drop below that figure until 1965, when four out of ten Americans were under the age of twenty. Figures in Landon Y. Jones, "Swinging 60s?" in Smithsonian Magazine, January 2006, pp 102–107.
It is jokingly said that, whatever year they were born, boomers were coming of age at the same time across the world; so that Britain was undergoing Beatlemania while people in the United States were driving over to Woodstock, organizing against the Vietnam War, or fighting and dying in the same war; boomers in Italy were dressing in mod clothes and "buying the world a Coke"; boomers in India were seeking new philosophical discoveries; American boomers in Canada had just found a new home after escaping the draft south of the border; Canadian Boomers were organizing support for Pierre Trudeau; and boomers in Mexico were discovering new hallucinogenic drugs and rediscovering old ones.
Although the term "boomer" has fallen into global use, the generation is also known in Europe as the Generation of 1968. The term is derived from a historically significant rise in the birthrate following the Second World War. Several factors have been credited with this rise, among them a general sense of relief at the war's end, and the resurgent economic conditions of the period.
References
See also
Notes
From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.
