Marital fertility and income: moderating effects of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints religion in Utah

Journal of Biosocial Science, 45(2), 239-248

DOI 10.1017/S002193201200065X PMID 23069479

Abstract

Utah has the highest total fertility of any state in the United States and also the highest proportion of population affiliated with the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (the LDS or Mormon Church). Data were used from the 1996 Utah Health Status Survey to investigate how annual household income, education and affiliation with the LDS Church affect fertility (children ever born) for married women in Utah. Younger age and higher education were negatively correlated with fertility in the sample as a whole and among non-LDS respondents. Income was negatively associated with fertility among non-LDS respondents. However, income was positively correlated with fertility among LDS respondents. This association persisted when instrumental variables were used to address the potential simultaneous equations bias arising from the potential endogeneity of income and fertility. The LDS religion's pronatalist stance probably encourages childbearing among those with higher income.

Topics

religion fertility income LDS Mormon pronatalism, Stanford Smith Utah fertility income marital childbearing, LDS Church pronatalist stance income fertility positive correlation, household income education fertility children ever born Utah, religious affiliation marital fertility biosocial study, income fertility relationship moderating effect religion, Utah high fertility rate LDS Church population, instrumental variables endogeneity income fertility analysis, sociodemographic determinants fertility religious populations, Church of Jesus Christ Latter-day Saints fertility rates

Cite this article

Stanford, J. B., & Smith, K. R. (2013). Marital fertility and income: moderating effects of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints religion in Utah. *Journal of biosocial science*, *45*(2), 239-248. https://doi.org/10.1017/S002193201200065X

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