By

CBSNews /

AP/ July 1, 2010, 8:26 PM

Baby Bust: U.S. Births Drop 2% in 2008

America's baby boomlet is showing signs of tapering off.

U.S. births in 2008 dropped nearly 2 percent from 2007 - the first annual decline in births since the beginning of the decade, according to new federal data.

It's not clear what caused the decline, but the nation's economic downturn may have had something to do with it.

Since the recession began in December 2007, the economy has lost almost 7 million jobs. Housing foreclosures worsened in 2007 too, and fell into a state of crisis in 2008.

The largest decline in births in 2008 were in California and Florida, two states hit hardest by the housing crisis.

But the downturn's effect on the public psychology - and families' willingness to have babies - may not have really hit until the fall of 2008, said Stephanie Ventura of the National Center for Health Statistics, the agency that put out the report.

The nation had about 4,247,000 births in 2008, down about 68,000 from the year before.

Of course, 2007 was a year in which more babies were born in the United States than any other year in the nation's history. In the past, a fluctuation of births by 1 or 2 percent would not be seen as very significant, especially from such an unusual year.

But the drop seems to break an unusual trend. Births had been rising since 2002, and birth rates had been increasing in women of different age groups, said Ventura, chief of the agency's reproductive statistics branch.

The new report is an early count of births from each state, and does not contain demographic breakdowns that might more completely explain whether birth declines occurred in some groups, but not others.

A month-by-month breakdown indicates births were up in January, February and April of 2008 compared to 2007, but were down every month after that except September. The largest declines were in October and November.

Births were down in all but 10 states. The number of births was on the rise mostly in the northwest quadrant of the country, including North Dakota, Montana, Wyoming, Idaho, Washington and Alaska.

In contrast, births in California were down by 15,000 and in Florida, by 8,000, compared to 2007.


AP
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proudmilvet says:
TexasED... I hope our birth rate goes down even further, because i would'nt want kids growing up next to people like you! By the way, I would rather live under Socialism then live under Limbaughism!!
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specialty8 says:
Alot of the illegals have left also and not popping out 8 kids since the economy has died.
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Hal_Horvath says:
I've been following this likely shift in population growth for a while (for more details see my blog: google "hal horvath blogspot", look in the archives for May or search for "population"). It's striking that North Dakota has one of the higher birth rates, along with the best state economy. The danger is to begin to follow Japan's path of lower birthrates and then a declining economy later.
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Hal_Horvath says:
I've been following this likely shift in population growth for a while (for more details see my blog: google "hal horvath blogspot", look in the archives for May or search for "population"). It's striking that North Dakota has one of the higher birth rates, along with the best state economy. The danger is to begin to follow Japan's path of lower birthrates and then a declining economy later.
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jclark7613 says:
It's going to raise again after this year ends because of the economy and recession. When people are trying to save money and stay home instead of dining out as much they have more time to be with their partner and make babies. It's unfortunate people are so negative on this site about children.
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badone1976 says:
I WANT TO BE LIKE MOST BLACKS IN MY AREA, 8 KIDS = NEW HOME AND A NAVIGATER, NOT RACIST JUST TRUE.
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xlib replies:
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I hear you. As one article pointed out last year (gotta look it up), if you have to be poor,, this is the place to be poor.
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book_of_wally says:
This is because women want careers and also hang on to old perceptions thus creating a dilema for them that causes them to not get married.
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Benton09 says:
Tax them for each offspring, then we'll cut the population down.
Give single people a tax break since they don't add to the health and education crisis in this country. The more kids you have, the more you pay. Enough with these 5 kid families unless you have a family farm to run. Planned Parenthood folks.
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xlib replies:
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How do you propose taxing people who don't pay taxes??
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John_Merritt says:
Interesting article. They might look at birth control sales, migratory habits of the illegal immigrant (since the highest rates were in Fla. and Cali.)and the decline in numbers in different races. This is not rascist because you might have a higher birth rate in one group and less in another. That could be due to socioeconomic factors, educational levels and cultural beliefs.
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sly_64 says:
The planet is far too populated as it is. No more 7 babies per couple !! time to thin the herd.
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xlib replies:
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Based on your post you must love the thug's science czar. Bet you have his book "ecoscience" right next to rules for radicals.
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