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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 4 page paper examines factors that led to the baby boom. Several theories, mostly reliant on economic theory, are relayed. Some social causes such as marriage are also duly noted. Other time periods are also noted for being a time of either increased or decreased fertility. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: RT13_SA543bm.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
because during these years people decided to have more children. More children were born during this time period than in other recent periods. The boom has produced great minds but
has also caused problems. It seems that the generation was one that was rather bent on experimenting with drugs and sex, a situation that has spawned a culture where such
things remain prominent. In some ways, the boomers had altered culture, and this population change then could be more significant than anyone might have thought. Of course, the most important
effect the boom has had is on the economy. This is well known. The boomers are blamed for the Social Security mess for example. What is the baby boom
exactly and when did it occur? What factors account for its onset and duration? In examining this issue, it will become clear what precipitates population change. The official years between
which the boom occurred are 1946 to 1964 ("Baby Boom," 2005). It should be noted that the baby boom came as a surprise to social planners. The post-World War II
baby boom had started during the 1940s, but population forecasters had based projections on experiences of the 1930s when fertility rates were rather low (Easterlin, 1992). During the 1950s,
aligned with the baby boom, forecasters did ignore the low fertility projections and then they went with high fertility forecasts (Easterlin, 1992). They assumed it would continue. After all,
the trend was that women would stay home with the children. Prosperity was a given. Yet, the experts were again taken by surprise when fertility rates would start on a
downward trend during the 1960s (Easterlin, 1992). Many of the theories to explain the population changes are related to economics. It has been thought that during the postwar time in
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