Fertility has been on a long-term declining trajectory worldwide and, apart from the occasional blip, in every country. There seems to be no prospect of a reversal of this trend, and no prospect of fertility returning to the replacement level of approximately 2.1 births per woman. So, when you see a research paper claiming that "high-fertility, high-retention groups persist, gain share, and lead the total population to grow", you should sit up and take notice. That is, at least, until you've carefully thought about the paper in question.
That's what happened to me with this 2025 NBER Working Paper by Sebastian Galiani (University of Maryland, College Park) and Raul Sosa (Universidad de San Andres). They create and calibrate models of fertility based on two different subgroupings (by race, and by religion), and taking account of cultural transmission of fertility rates from mothers to daughters. They then use their calibrated models to simulate population change going forward for ten generations. What they find when the population is categorised by race is a decreasing population, as shown in Figure 1 Panel A from the paper:
And when Galiani and Sosa categorise the population by religion, they instead find an increasing population, as shown in Figure 2 Panel A from the paper:
Now, this struck me as really odd. We’re talking about the same country and the same underlying population. If you split that population into subgroups and take a weighted average of what happens in each subgroup, you should get back the outcome for the population as a whole. If you are measuring the same underlying thing consistently, changing the subgroups (race in one analysis, and religion in another) shouldn’t magically create or destroy population growth in the model. At most, it should change which groups are growing faster and therefore how the composition by group changes over time, with high-fertility groups making up a larger share of the population and lower-fertility groups making up a smaller share. But the headline result here is much stronger than that, with the direction of population growth in aggregate changing direction entirely depending on the groupings that are employed. Galiani and Sosa use those results to conclude that:
...whenever at least one group remains above replacement on the female line and transmits identity effectively, its share rises and turns the aggregate path upward.
The first part of that conclusion makes sense, but the second part stretches credibility. It made me wonder whether the results were being driven by unusual features of the model, or by different modelling choices in the two analyses.
So, I dug into the paper, which is not an easy task as it is quite theoretical. And there are consequential differences between the two analyses (by race and by religion) that drive the difference in results. First, they use different measures of fertility, with the analysis by race based on the total fertility rate (TFR), while the analysis by religion is based on completed fertility (see this post for a brief discussion on the difference between those two measures). There is a consequential difference between the two measures. By definition, completed fertility can only be observed for women who have finished their childbearing years, so it covers a period over the last twenty or more years. In contrast, the total fertility rate that Galiani and Sosa use was measured in 2023, after a long period of fertility decline. By construction then, the analysis using completed fertility (the analysis by religion) will be assuming higher fertility than the analysis using the total fertility rate (the analysis by race). This is highlighted by Table 1 in the paper, which shows that nearly every racial group has a total fertility rate that is below replacement (Hispanic is highest among the large groups at a TFR of 1.946, while Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islanders have a TFR of 2.218), whereas there are several religious groups with completed fertility rates above replacement (including Mormons at 3.4, and Muslims at 2.4).
Second, their calibration implies much bigger gaps across religious groups than across racial groups. Specifically, they assume greater dispersion in fertility and retention by religion than by race. That means that the forces driving fertility change within population groups are much stronger in the analysis by religion than the analysis by race. So, essentially this doubles down on the effect of higher fertility that arises from the different data sources.
Overall, I don't find the comparison across the two models to be credible. They are employing different measures, taken from different points in time, and applying different modelling assumptions. In contrast, the results within each model showing that the relative group proportions change over time to favour groups that have higher fertility are plausible and are worth taking account of. For instance, Galiani and Sosa conclude that:
Although the objective is not to forecast outcomes for particular groups, our world simulations imply not only a more religious composition but also that, within the horizon we study, Muslims become the largest tradition by share.
That seems like a sensible conclusion to draw based on the evidence, especially as they explicitly note that they aren't trying to forecast the population. Nevertheless, they do forecast the population, and their results are not entirely consistent with what is expected to happen. World population is set to start declining later this century in large part because of declining overall fertility, and their results based on religion suggest that this is suddenly going to reverse course, and remain upward over a time horizon of ten generations. In reality, the long-run trend in fertility is difficult to change in the real world, and applying some complicated economic modelling in a way that appears to overturn the on-the-ground reality is not going to contribute to a change.
[HT: Marginal Revolution]
Read more:
- The pandemic 'baby bust' in other countries
- Cohort effects and the downturn in US fertility since the Great Recession
- The new economics of fertility
- The economics of the falling total fertility rate in New Zealand
- The economics of fertility in high-income countries
- Can fertility return to replacement levels?




