Too Worried about the Environment to Have Children? Or More Worried about the Environment After Having Children? The Reciprocal Relationship Between Environmental Concerns and Fertility
posted on 2025-07-11, 12:28authored bySteffen PetersSteffen Peters, Erich Striessnig, Alessandra Trimarchi, Maria Rita Testa, Natalie Nitsche
<p dir="ltr">Amid rising concerns about climate change, in recent years demographers have increasingly examined whether environmental concerns have become a factor in shaping reproductive intentions and outcomes. However, little is still known about the potentially reciprocal relationship between environmental concerns and fertility, in part due to the lack of longitudinal data of sufficient temporal scope. Our study provides first results based on unique data from the German Socio-Economic Panel (GSOEP), which contains both full fertility histories and yearly (1984 to 2020) measurements of environmental concern. We follow individuals born between 1965 and 2000 and investigate a) whether environmental concerns predict first-birth quantum and timing, and b) whether environmental concern trajectories vary between eventual parents and the childless. Overall, results indicate no significant link between environmental concerns – whether early in life or across the life course – and (the timing of) the transition to parenthood, or the number of children achieved by age 40. However, we find a negative association between environmental concerns and the chances of becoming a parent for older birth cohorts, suggesting a potential generational shift in how ecological awareness intersects with fertility decisions. Moreover, parents seem to be more worried about the environment than the childless, though these differences seem to be largely explained by unobserved heterogeneity rather than parenthood itself.</p>
Funding
Ideological Pairings in Couples and Family Processes
Too Worried about the Environment to Have Children? Or More Worried about the Environment After Having Children? The Reciprocal Relationship Between Environmental Concerns and Fertility
Original language
English
Affiliation (institution of first SU-affiliated author)
310 Sociologiska institutionen | Department of Sociology