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Declining Fertility: New Generations and New Perspectives How university-educated members of Generation Z in Sweden explain their decision to delay parenthood

Malmberg, Magnus LU (2024) EOSK12 20231
Department of Economic History
Abstract
This thesis aims to examine how university-educated members of Generation Z in Sweden explain their decision to delay parenthood. As declining fertility rates across the globe risk to strain the global economy, this topic has never been more relevant. Sweden and the Noridcs have served as examples on which other nations have based their fertility strategies, but as the region has seen a sudden, and so far unexplained, drop in fertility, continuing this practice may be futile. By examining existing research on fertility decline this thesis will show that current theoretical frameworks fall short of explaining these new trends. Instead it will suggest the application of Social Exchange Theory and Generational Theory to identify drivers of... (More)
This thesis aims to examine how university-educated members of Generation Z in Sweden explain their decision to delay parenthood. As declining fertility rates across the globe risk to strain the global economy, this topic has never been more relevant. Sweden and the Noridcs have served as examples on which other nations have based their fertility strategies, but as the region has seen a sudden, and so far unexplained, drop in fertility, continuing this practice may be futile. By examining existing research on fertility decline this thesis will show that current theoretical frameworks fall short of explaining these new trends. Instead it will suggest the application of Social Exchange Theory and Generational Theory to identify drivers of the current trend brake. To prove the concept, 6 qualitative interviews with university students from generation Z will be carried out, and the answers will be coded and analysed from these perspectives. The results identify four areas that have significant impact on the generation’s decision to delay parenthood: Economical Security, Safe Upbringing, Personal Fulfilment, and Environmental Concerns. The study contributes to current research by analysing each area and suggesting room for future research. New perspectives for policymakers are also identified as the overall results suggest that the drivers for the new generations are so widely different to previous generations that complete policy reforms or more targeted approaches might be needed. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
Malmberg, Magnus LU
supervisor
organization
course
EOSK12 20231
year
type
M2 - Bachelor Degree
subject
keywords
Declining Fertility, Generation Z, Social Exchange Theory, Scandinavia
language
English
id
9150038
date added to LUP
2024-03-21 07:32:04
date last changed
2024-03-21 07:32:04
@misc{9150038,
  abstract     = {{This thesis aims to examine how university-educated members of Generation Z in Sweden explain their decision to delay parenthood. As declining fertility rates across the globe risk to strain the global economy, this topic has never been more relevant. Sweden and the Noridcs have served as examples on which other nations have based their fertility strategies, but as the region has seen a sudden, and so far unexplained, drop in fertility, continuing this practice may be futile. By examining existing research on fertility decline this thesis will show that current theoretical frameworks fall short of explaining these new trends. Instead it will suggest the application of Social Exchange Theory and Generational Theory to identify drivers of the current trend brake. To prove the concept, 6 qualitative interviews with university students from generation Z will be carried out, and the answers will be coded and analysed from these perspectives. The results identify four areas that have significant impact on the generation’s decision to delay parenthood: Economical Security, Safe Upbringing, Personal Fulfilment, and Environmental Concerns. The study contributes to current research by analysing each area and suggesting room for future research. New perspectives for policymakers are also identified as the overall results suggest that the drivers for the new generations are so widely different to previous generations that complete policy reforms or more targeted approaches might be needed.}},
  author       = {{Malmberg, Magnus}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  note         = {{Student Paper}},
  title        = {{Declining Fertility: New Generations and New Perspectives How university-educated members of Generation Z in Sweden explain their decision to delay parenthood}},
  year         = {{2024}},
}