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Resources and the life course: Patterns through the demographic transition
Institution:1. Department of Spatial Economics, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, The Netherlands;2. Institute for Economic and Social Research, Faculty of Economics and Business, University of Indonesia (LPEM‐FEBUI), Indonesia;3. Tinbergen Institute, Amsterdam, The Netherlands;1. CIAS (Research Centre for Anthropology and Health), Department of Life Sciences, University of Coimbra, 3000-456 Coimbra, Portugal;2. Department of Biology, University of Évora, 7002-554 Évora, Portugal;1. School of Mathematics and Computational Science, Sun Yat-sen University, Guangzhou 510275, PR China;2. School of Science, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou 310058, PR China;1. Department of Biology, Box 90338, Duke University, Durham, NC 27708-0338, USA;2. Institute of Arctic Biology and Department of Biology and Wildlife, University of Alaska, Fairbanks, Fairbanks, AK 99775, USA
Abstract:In most mammals, and in the majority of traditional human societies for which data exist, status, power, or resource control correlates with lifetime reproductive success; male and female patterns differ. Because such correlations are often argued to have disappeared in human societies during the demographic transition of the nineteenth century, we analyzed wealth and lifetime reproductive success in a nineteenth-century Swedish population in four economically diverse parishes, subsuming geographic and temporal variation. Children of both sexes born to poorer parents were more likely than richer children to die or emigrate before reaching maturity. Poorer men, and women whose fathers were poorer, were less likely to marry in the parish than others, largely as a result of differential mortality and migration. Of all adults of both sexes who remained in their home parish and thus generated complete lifetime records, richer individuals had greater lifetime fertility and more children alive at age ten, than others. The age-specific fertility of richer women rises slightly sooner, and reaches a higher peak, than that of poorer women. These patterns persisted throughout the period of the sample (1824–1896). Thus, wealth appears, even during the demographic transition in an egalitarian society, to have influenced lifetime reproductive success positively.
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