Birth rate in United States is crisis that cursing United States as other Western countries (see Birth rate decline crisis). Since Sexual Revolution in 1960s, birth rate is continuing to decline, after decades from pushing from pushing left wing agendas from Birth Control, Abortion, Feminism, Environmental lunacy, standing against family values and also normalizing unhealthy food lifestyle habits which lead to fertility decline within many couples.
The current birth rate of United States is 1.7 per couple which under replacement rate of 2.1 per couple. Among religious group Mennonites have highest birth rate which is around 7.7 per woman,[1] then followed by Amish who have fertility rate which around 5.7 per family.[2] While Non Orthodox Jews have lowest birth which around 1.4 followed by Atheists and non religious which is around 1.5.
Among races Hispanics have highest fertility rate which is around 2.0 per woman,[3] while Native Americans have lowest fertility rate which is around 1.5 per woman.[4]
The Red states which have stricter abortion and birth control laws have more fertility rates than Blue states. South Dakota which is most Pro-life state in the country have highest birth rate which is around 2.0 followed by Nebraska 1.9, while DC have lowest birth rate which around 1.2 followed by state of Vermont by 1.3.
Birth rate per races
- Hispanics 2.0
- Blacks 1.7
- Whites 1.6
- Asians 1.5
- Natives 1.5
Birth rate per religious groups
- Mennonites 7.7
- Amish 5.7
- Latter Day Saints 3.5
- Orthodox Jews 3.3
- Muslims 2.5
- Evangelicals 2.3
- Catholics 2.1
- Atheists and non religious 1.5
- Non Orthodox Jews 1.4
Birth rate per state
- South Dakota 2.0
- Nebraska 1.9
- Alaska 1.9
- Louisiana 1.9
- Utah 1.9
- Iowa 1.8
- North Dakota 1.8
- Texas 1.8
- Kansas 1.8
- Kentucky 1.8
- Idaho 1.8
- Oklahoma 1.8
- Arkansas 1.8
- Mississippi 1.8
- Indiana 1.8
- Minnesota 1.8
- New Jersey 1.8
- Alabama 1.7
- Hawaii 1.7
- Tennessee 1.7
- Delaware 1.7
- Missouri 1.7
- North Carolina 1.7
- Ohio 1.7
- South Carolina 1.7
- Maryland 1.7
- Wyoming 1.7
- Georgia 1.7
- Virginia 1.7
- Wisconsin 1.7
- Florida 1.7
- Arizona 1.6
- West Virginia 1.6
- Michigan 1.6
- New Mexico 1.6
- Montana 1.6
- Pennsylvania 1.6
- Nevada 1.6
- New York 1.6
- Connecticut 1.6
- California 1.5
- Illinois 1.5
- Washington 1.5
- Colorado 1.5
- New Hampshire 1.4
- Rhode Island 1.4
- Oregon 1.4
- Vermont 1.3
- DC 1.2
See also
References
- ↑ https://www.researchgate.net/publication/6426442_The_shape_of_high_fertility_in_a_traditional_Mennonite_population
- ↑ https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC8417155/
- ↑ Hispanic women no longer account for the majority of immigrant births in the U.S.
- ↑ https://theweek.com/politics/why-native-americans-are-the-exception-to-the-population-slowdown