Babies per woman (total fertility rate)

Documentation — version 14

Download » Spreadsheet with data for countries, regions and global total — v14

Summary Documentation of v14

Sources

1800 – 1950: We use the Gapminder Historic estimate which was compiled and documented by Mattias Lindgren, see previous versions in this link.

1950 – 2021: For most of the years, we use the estimates of the UN World Population Prospect 2022, for the Total Fertility Rate.

2022 – 2100: We use the UN projection of future fertility rate in all countries, called median fertility variant, provided with the UN World Population Prospect 2022.

How the sources were combined

In general we link our historic estimates with the UN data by smoothly transitioning the curves over a period of 40 years from whatever our historic sources had to the levels that the UN is publishing. This means that in the period 1930  to 1970 we move between the two sources.

Anomalies

The Korean War (1950 -1955) shows a fall in Babies per woman. The UN data shows a relatively lower drop in birth rate during this period compared to the historic data.

North Korea 1800 to 2100 Total Fertility Rate Gapminder

South Korea 1800 to 2100 Total Fertility Rate Gapminder

We use the dashed line (—) in which we blend the data in the time period of 1950 – 1955 to show the effect of the Korean war and follow the Historic data (red line) going back to 1800.

Global and regional averages

Total global total fertility rate was calculated as an average of all countries weighted by their population sizes. The proper way to calculate it would be to account for the number of women in fertile ages and their birth patterns, but this method comes very close to the official UN world fertility rate with a much simpler method. IN 1950, the UN number for global fertility rate is 5.0 and the average of all countries weighted by population is 4.84. In 2017, the comparison gives us, UN: 2.48 vs. 2.46. The regional numbers are also calculated as averages weighted by population size.

Detailed documentation and feedback

For transparency we provide the files we used to calculate this data here, but we haven’t had time to clean them up and document all the steps in the process, see our data method overview. Any questions about the data and suggestions for how to improve it  are always very welcome: in our Inbox.

Previous versions

Summary documentation of v12

Sources

1800 to 1950 (and in some cases also years after 1950): Gapminder v6 which were compiled and documented by Mattias Lindgren, see previous versions further down on this page.

1950 to 2014: In most cases we use the latest UN estimates from World Population Prospects 2017 published in the file with Annually interpolated demographic indicators, called WPP2017_INT_F01_ANNUAL_DEMOGRAPHIC_INDICATORS.xlsx , accessed on September 2, 2017.

2015 – 2099: We use the UN forecast of future fertility rate in all countries, called median fertility variant.

How the sources were combined

In general we link our historic estimates with the UN data by smoothly transitioning the curves over a period of 30 years form whatever our historic sources had to the levels that UN is publishing. This means that in the period 1930  to 1970 we move between the two sources, which often has minor differences, like in the case of Senegal here, where the dashed line move form our historic (red line) to the new UN data (blue line).

In some cases, the difference in this period is very large. The most drastic example is Gabon, where UN publishes a very low estimate for 1950 (the blue line9 whereas our historic sources tells us the number of children per woman was probably much higher. In this extreme example, you can see how our final dashed line, is diverging from our historic sources (red lin) in the 1930’s and getting closer to the UN blue line year by year to finally connect with it in 1980. 

But in many cases the UN data is not used, between 1950 and 2014, because it is smoothed. Interesting dips and spikes are not showing up like in the examples of Australia and China. The blue line represents the UN official data and the red line comes from historic records documented in version 6 below.

In some cases the UN has been smoothed, like in this example for Australia. In those cases we use data form the national bureau of statistics instead as documented in Gapminder v6 below.

Global and regional averages

To global total fertility rate was calculated as an average of all countries weighted by their population sizes. The proper way to calculate it would be to account for the number of women in fertile ages and their birth patterns, but this method comes very close to the official UN world fertility rate with a much simpler method. IN 1950, the UN number for global fertility rate is 5.0 and the average of all countries weighted by population is 4.84. In 2017, the comparison gives us, UN: 2.48 vs. 2.46. The regional numbers are also calculated as averages weighted by population size.

Detailed documentation and feedback

For transparency we provide the files we used to calculate this data here, but we haven’t had time to clean them up and document all the steps in the process, see our data method overviewAny questions about the data and suggestions for how to improve it  are always very welcome: in our data forum.

Previous versions

Version 6

Download documentation (pdf)
» Download excel-sheet with data & meta-data (xlsx)

Version 5

 » Download excel-sheet with data & meta-data (xlsx)

Version 4

» Download excel-sheet with data & meta-data (xlsx)

Version 1

» Go to the google-spreadsheet that contains a copy of the “data quality rates” for version 1

» Download documentation of version 1 (pdf)