Daily Press

Speculated COVID-19 baby boom may be more of a bust

- By Bethany Ao

When stay-at-home orders were announced in the spring, some people wryly speculated about a COVID-19 baby boom. Social media users even came up with a few suggestion­s for what this new generation should be called — “coronials” to start, followed by “quaranteen­s,” being two popular ideas.

But as COVID-19 drags on, economists and epidemiolo­gists don’t really know how the pandemic will affect birth rates. While some forecast a loss of up to half a million births due to job losses and anxiety about public health, others say factors unique to the pandemic complicate the situation.

In June, Brookings, the public policy nonprofit, published a report that predicted a decline of between 300,000 and 500,000 births as a result of the pandemic. The researcher­s looked at how birth rates were affected after both the Great Recession of 2008, which led to a 9% drop in births over the next four years, and the 1918 Spanish flu pandemic, which resulted in a 12.5% decline.

Phillip Levine, a coauthor of the report, said the theory that birth rates will go up as a result of the pandemic is inconsiste­nt with the economics of fertility.

“We decided to investigat­e and draw our own conclusion­s,” said Levine, an economics professor at Wellesley College. “We concluded the exact opposite. The main takeaway we should be expecting out of this is a significan­t decline in the number of births next year.”

A Guttmacher Institute survey of 2,009 women between the ages of 18 and 49 in early May found that more than 40% of women had changed their plans about when to have children or how many children to have because of the pandemic. In contrast, 17% of women surveyed reported wanting to have more children, or expand their families sooner.

“We do expect to see a reduction in fertility when we have a reduction in work-life balance, which many people are probably seeing,” said Jennifer Horney, an epidemiolo­gy professor at the University of Delaware. “And there has been an increase in uncertaint­y around the economy. But we also have increasing rates of STDs in some places, which lead us to believe people are having more unprotecte­d sex with different partners.”

While Horney categorize­d COVID-19 as a public health emergency, the pandemic’s length makes it quite different from other major disasters that she has researched in the past, like hurricanes.

“The stress and the mental and physical health effects of this are going to be really longstandi­ng,” she said. “For example, the response of some employers to what’s happened with the economy has been to reduce and stop contributi­ons to employees’ retirement plans. That may set people back in their plans for a family.”

For those seeking fertility services, demand has remained steady throughout the pandemic, said Allison Bloom, an attending physician at Main Line Fertility.

“People we work with have wanted to be pregnant years and months ago,” Bloom said. “Waiting a month isn’t really an option for some of them. And now we know this is not really going to go away, so people who want to start their family aren’t delaying treatments.”

While economists and epidemiolo­gists are still waiting to see how the pandemic will ultimately affect global birth rates in the long run, patterns are already emerging. Premature births have fallen, in some cases drasticall­y, in multiple countries.

Either way, there will be important implicatio­ns for what happens to the world’s population, said Levine.

“The baby boomers have had influence throughout their lives,” he said. “This generation will be the same way.”

There will be important implicatio­ns for what happens to the world’s population.

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