Yes, No, Maybe: Fertility Intentions and Reasons Behind Them Among Childless Finnish Men and Women
Keywords:
fertility intentions, postponementAbstract
In this paper we examine reproductive intentions among childless Finnish men andwomen aged 18 to 34 years. In Finland, as in other European countries, young
adults are postponing parenthood to an ever-later age. Our intention is to investigate
expressions of reproductive intentions, and particularly, to focus on the division of
intentions between more positive and more hesitant expressions. We examine how
education, factors related to economic security and values relate to childbearing
hesitation among young adults. We also use information on the reasons that the young
themselves have provided to examine differences in fertility intentions. Our study uses
a sample of 724 men and women drawn from the PPA2 survey, which focused on Finns
attitudes in 2002 toward family and children, family policy measures, values in life,
and fertility intentions. We ? nd that education is related to postponement, and that
unemployment increases hesitation. Partnership and the state of the relationship are
clearly important preconditions for positive childbearing intentions among both men
and women. Postponers are more likely to stress reasons that are related to present life
situation and are more open to change, while persons who hesitate regarding future
childbearing stress longer-standing reasons behind their intentions.
How to Cite
Miettinen, A., & Paajanen, P. (2005). Yes, No, Maybe: Fertility Intentions and Reasons Behind Them Among Childless Finnish Men and Women. Finnish Yearbook of Population Research, 41, 165–184. https://doi.org/10.23979/fypr.45020