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The baby boom

Why were so many babies born in the United States after World War II? 

Overview

  • Following World War II, the United States experienced a greatly elevated birth rate, adding on average 4.24 million new babies to the population every year between 1946 and 1964.
  • This generation of "baby boomers" was the result of a strong postwar economy, in which Americans felt confident they would be able to support a larger number of children. Boomers also influenced the economy as a core marketing demographic for products tied to their age group, from toys to records.
  • Constituting as much as 40% of the American population, baby boomers have exerted a strong pull on American culture at large, particularly during the social movements of the 1960s.
  • Today, most boomers are at or near retirement, prompting concerns for how American society will cope with an aging population.

The baby boom

Like many industrialized Western nations, in the early twentieth century the United States was experiencing a gradual decline in its birthrate. As more Americans moved off the farm and into the city, having a large family slowly transformed from a good labor investment to a poor economic choice. Consequently, in the midst of the Great Depression, the American birthrate fell to its lowest point yet, to just 18.4 live births per thousand population.1
Photograph of a hospital nursery showing five cots where newborns sleep.
A hospital nursery full of newborns in the coal mining town of Richlands, Virginia, August 1946. Photograph by Russell Lee, image courtesy National Archives and Records Administration.
World War II, however, had a profound effect on the American birth rate, which skyrocketed in a stunning and unexpected reversal of the prewar decline. A combination of factors produced this baby boom: soldiers returning home from the war were weary of adventure and wished to settle down into family life with their sweethearts, and GI Bill benefits promised the decent pay, access to good jobs, and affordable housing that made raising a family possible. After more than fifteen years of economic uncertainty, things were finally looking up in the United States, and everyone was determined to make the most of it.

Babies, babies, and more babies

World War II had vast repercussions not only on world politics but also on the American family. Couples rushed to wed and conceive children before soldiers shipped out--in part due to the romance and urgency of wartime, in part due to the extra pay soldiers received if they had families to support.2 The spike in marriages was even larger after the war, as returning soldiers tied the knot. 2.2 million couples married in 1946, a new record that would stand until the 1970s.3
With this record number of unions came a record number of babies. The first stirrings of the baby boom became evident as early as 1942, when the historically low birth rates of the Great Depression began to turn around with the birth of "furlough babies" during World War II. It wasn't until nine months after the war's end, however, that the boom began in earnest: before demobilization only about 200,000 babies were born in the United States per month, but by the end of 1946 that figure had increased to nearly 350,000 babies. 20% more babies were born in 1946 than in 1945. By 1947, the number of live births per thousand population jumped to 26.6.4
But the baby boom wasn't just a quick spike in births after the end of World War II. The elevated American fertility rate continued for another 18 years. On average, 4.24 million babies were born per year between 1946 and 1964, when birth rates finally began to decline again. In 1964, the 76.4 million babies born during the baby boom generation constituted a whopping 40% of the US population, which was then about 192 million.5
Line graph showing US crude birth rates (number of births per thousand population) from 1909 to 2009. The birthrate dropped slowly from 30 births per thousand in 1909 to 18.5 births per thousand in the late 1930s. Starting in 1945 there was a sharp spike in the birth rate again, back up to 26.5 births per thousand. The high birth rate continued until the mid-1960s, when the rate finally fell to pre-1945 levels. The birth rate kept falling until the late 1970s, when the "baby boom" echo generation made a small increase through the 1990s. The birth rate in 2009 is 14.0 births per thousand, all-time low.
US crude birth rates from 1909 to 2009. The red portion of the line denotes the baby boom generation. The smaller bump between 1976 and 2001 shows the baby boom "echo." Image courtesy Wikimedia Commons.

Postwar domesticity and its economic benefits

Why did the birth rate rise so suddenly and remain elevated for so long? Both men and women had access to relatively reliable forms of birth control, so for the most part couples were making a conscious decision to have more children. The World War II generation, in fact, was the most marriage- and family-oriented in US history: 96.4% of women and 94.1% of men in this cohort got married, and at a younger age than their forebears. They also had more children, sooner after marriage and spaced closer together, than earlier generations.6
Propaganda poster from World War II, painted by Norman Rockwell. The text says OURS . . . to fight for: FREEDOM FROM WANT. The painting on the poster shows a Thanksgiving dinner table. An elderly white couple places a large turkey on the dinner table and many white family members smile in anticipation of the meal. The painting suggests a happy and united family enjoying a prosperous time.
Norman Rockwell, Freedom from Want, 1943. This Office of War Information poster illustrated one of the freedoms the Allies were fighting for during World War II. Images like these may have induced Americans to crave domesticity and family life in the postwar era. Image courtesy National Archives.
Historians and demographers have pointed out a number of possible reasons for this increased devotion to domesticity and child-rearing after the war, from government propaganda extolling the virtues of apple-pie American life during the war to a yearning for the security offered by "normal" family life during an era when fear of the atomic bomb pervaded society. One thing is certain: these high fertility rates closely correlate with a period of unprecedented economic prosperity, as well as optimism that the prosperity would last. After years of barely getting by during the Great Depression and enduring shortages and rationing during the war, Americans finally could afford to have a lot of children, so they did.7
The baby boom was not only a result of the healthy economy but also a major contributor to it. An enormous generation of babies became an enormous generation of children, teenagers, young adults, adults, and (more recently) seniors. As the baby boomers aged, manufacturers and advertisers targeted this gigantic demographic. As babies, the boomers invigorated the market for toys, candy, and washing machines. As children, their proliferation drove the construction of new schools and suburbs. As teenagers, they dominated the popular culture of the 1950s and 1960s, buying clothing and records.8 As adults, they gave birth to an "echo boom" generation of children, a smaller but still significant generation of kids born between 1976 and 2001.9

Significance of the baby boom

The generation born in the twenty years following World War II has been a defining force in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Coming of age in the 1960s and 1970s, they were on the forefront of social change in those decades, including the later stages of the Civil Rights Movement, the protest against the Vietnam War, and the second wave of the feminist movement. It might even be said that those movements gained momentum because of the sheer size of the baby boomer generation, whose shared concerns and life experiences as an age cohort exerted an influence on American culture proportional to their numbers.10
The unusual size of the baby boomer generation has not had universally positive effects. Like a "pig in a python," as many demographers have characterized the group, the boomer generation has stretched and transformed American society as its members have moved through life. Today, the baby boomers still number about 76 million, as immigrants of approximately the same age have made up for American-born boomers who emigrated or passed away.
As they age, the ratio of retired Americans compared to working Americans will increase significantly, placing considerable strain on Social Security, hospitals, and other government agencies designed to aid the elderly. The Census Bureau estimates that by 2030 one in five Americans will be over the age of 65. Furthermore, as the US birth rate is currently at an all-time low of just 12.5 live births per thousand population, by 2056 Americans aged 65 or older will outnumber those under the age of 18.11 What effect this aging population will have on US society remains to be seen.

What do you think?

What major historical events and factors caused the baby boom?
How is the baby boom related to both the Great Depression and World War II?
What are some negative consequences of the baby boom?

Want to join the conversation?

  • duskpin tree style avatar for user Original Gray (OG)
    No one gonna talk about in the "Freedom from Want" photo, the dude in the corner is just staring right back at us... into our souls...
    (11 votes)
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  • mr pants teal style avatar for user Lena
    How did 2% more of women get married, if there would likely have been more women than men? (I'm assuming there would have been more women than men total, considering war deaths)
    (6 votes)
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    • piceratops ultimate style avatar for user Kim Kutz Elliott
      From the author:Great question! I think one of the compounding factors might be remarriage. Since the cohort of the baby boomers includes people born between 1945 and 1965, it's quite a large group of people who might have gotten married at any point in their lives. Since women tend to outlive men, it's possible that women had more opportunities for marriage in their lives. I might dig a bit more into this data, though, and see what I can learn.
      (10 votes)
  • leafers ultimate style avatar for user Hao Zheng
    Why has the birthrate dropped since then, though? Why did this change?
    (4 votes)
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    • blobby green style avatar for user katebyerl
      The birthrate has dropped over the years due to a decrease in our economy. To be more specific, the cost of goods is rising faster than work wages. Because of this, it is difficult for families to live with just 1 child, rather than 6. In turn, families have less children to accommodate for the rising prices so they can give their children a half way decent life.
      (8 votes)
  • hopper cool style avatar for user LUCAS :)
    Ha boomers
    (6 votes)
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  • stelly blue style avatar for user Jorge Daniel Garcia
    What factors influenced the "1976 and 2001 shows the baby boom "echo.""?
    (2 votes)
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  • duskpin ultimate style avatar for user Gloaming_Hour
    What are "furlough babies"?
    (3 votes)
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    • aqualine tree style avatar for user David Alexander
      Soldiers live mainly with persons of their own sex: men with men, for example. Many soldiers have wives and girlfriends "back at home". When soldiers have a few days or weeks off from duty (a furlough) to visit home, sex with those wives and girlfriends is a natural thing to happen. Handy and reliable birth control was not common until the 1960s, so a certain amount of that sex during those furloughs led to a certain amount of pregnancy and, subsequently, to a certain number of babies.
      (5 votes)
  • boggle blue style avatar for user x.asper
    What are some of the effects of an aging society? Hypothetically speaking.
    (3 votes)
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    • aqualine tree style avatar for user David Alexander
      When more people are taking resources from the system than they put into it, more working people are required to put those resources in. When, however, like in Japan, there are old people living longer and longer, and young people producing fewer and fewer children, a crunch comes. Now the people who care for the elderly of Japan are foreign domestic workers, who are not accepted in the society. These foreign workers leave their children home in places like Indonesia to grow up without mothers nearby. The consequences of being cared for by your grandmother so that your mother can go to a different country to take care of someone else's grandmother are bad for an ongoing society.
      (4 votes)
  • blobby green style avatar for user jb268536
    How did the birth rait go up?
    (3 votes)
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  • piceratops tree style avatar for user Elena
    What are some effects of the baby boom?
    (1 vote)
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    • aqualine tree style avatar for user David Alexander
      Many hospitals expanded their maternity wards.
      Many doctors got additional experience in obstetrics.
      Paper diapers were developed.
      Schools were built.
      Many teachers were trained and employed.
      More toys were sold.
      Rock and Roll.
      More bodies were available for use by military forces.
      More weapons were purchased by governments to arm soldiers.
      College options expanded.
      Resources were exploited like never before.
      Global warming.
      Is that enough?
      (6 votes)
  • blobby green style avatar for user chhuon.menglin
    As a matter of fact, there were a few historical events that caused the baby-boomer period. First of all, the post-war economic development led to the confidence of each family which had the propensity to have more children, in particular, the soldiers came back home and enjoyed family reunions. Secondly, we can deeply look at the GL Bill advantages in which everyone gained a job, better housing
    (2 votes)
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    • aqualine tree style avatar for user David Alexander
      These, indeed, are good reasons.
      You might add the lack of effective birth control. Many young men who may have waited for sexual initiation had they remained in small towns and on farms experienced something else through military service and the access to prostitutes that came with it.
      When these young men moved to cities after the war, and young women (who had moved into non-farm employment during the war) met up afterwards, babies boomed.
      (3 votes)