USA TODAY US Edition

US birthrate hits a 32-year low, CDC says

- Ryan W. Miller

The birthrate in the USA hit a 32year low last year as the number of babies born dropped for the fourth straight year, federal health officials said in a report released Wednesday.

More than 3.78 million babies were born in the USA in 2018, a 2% drop from the year before and the lowest number in 32 years.

The total fertility rate dropped 2% since last year and hit a record low at 1.728 births per woman, meaning not enough babies are being born to replace current population levels.

The fertility rate “in 2018 was again below replacemen­t – the level at which a given generation can exactly replace itself (2,100 births per 1,000 women),” health officials said in the report. “The rate has generally been below replacemen­t since 1971 and consistent­ly below replacemen­t for the last decade.”

The report was published by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Birthrates among teens, women ages 15-19, were down 7% from 2017 and by more than half since 2007 levels. The rates for women ages 20 to 34 also saw declines from 2017.

Older women had rising birthrates. The rate jumped up 1% for women ages 35-39 and 2% for women ages 40-44.

Many younger people are pushing off marriage and starting families later in life.

“We’re clearly in the throes of major social change with regard to women getting married and choosing to have children,” Donna Strobino, a professor at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, told NBC News. “There’s no question that part of the explanatio­n for that is economic. It’s very expensive to raise children these days. And in part it’s social – all the changes in women’s roles.”

“That’s a lot of empty kindergart­en rooms,” demographe­r Kenneth Johnson of the University of New Hampshire’s Carsey School of Public Policy told The Associated Press.

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