Datasets containing the United Nations time series of the total fertility rate (TFR) for all countries of the world as available in 2019.
data(tfr)
data(tfr_supplemental)data(tfrprojMed)
data(tfrproj80l)
data(tfrproj80u)
data(tfrproj95l)
data(tfrproj95u)
data(tfrprojHigh)
data(tfrprojLow)
The datasets contain one record per country or region. It contains the following variables:
country_code
Numerical Location Code (3-digit codes following ISO 3166-1 numeric standard) - see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_3166-1_numeric.
name
Name of country or region (following ISO 3166 official short names in English - see https://www.iso.org/obp/ui/#search/code/ and United Nations Multilingual Terminology Database - see https://unterm.un.org/unterm).
1950-1955
, 1955-1960
, …TFR in various five-year time intervals (i.e., from 1 July in year t to 1 July in year t+5 such as the period 1950-1955 refers to the period 1950.5-1955.5 and the mid of the period is 1953.0). The tfrproj*
datasets start at 2020-2025
. The tfr_supplemental
datasets start at 1740-1745
. Missing data have NA
values.
Dataset tfr
contains estimates of the historical TFR starting at 1950; tfr_supplemental
contains a subset of countries for which data prior 1950 are available. Datasets tfrprojMed
contain the median projections. Datasets tfrproj80l
, tfrproj80u
, tfrproj95l
, and tfrproj95u
are the lower (l) and upper (u) bounds of the 80 and 95% probability intervals, respectively.
Datasets tfrprojHigh
and tfrprojLow
contain high and low variants, respectively, defined as +-1/2 child.
The historical dataset tfr_supplemental
(for 103 countries or areas) covers the period 1740-1950 (including 24 countries with data before 1850), and is based on series for five-year periods from the following sources: (1) Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research (Germany) and Vienna Institute of Demography (Austria). (2012). Human Fertility Database (HFD). Available at https://www.humanfertility.org. Data downloaded on 13 May 2012; (2) Festy, P. (1979). La fecondite des pays occidentaux de 1870 a 1970. Paris: Presses universitaires de France; (3) Chesnais, J.C. (1992). The demographic transition: stages, patterns, and economic implications: a longitudinal study of sixty-seven countries covering the period 1720-1984. Oxford ; New York: Clarendon Press; (4) Bhat, P.N.M. (1989). "Mortality and fertility in India, 1881-1961: a reassessment." pp. 73-118 in India's historical demography: studies in famine, disease and society, edited by T. Dyson. London and Riverdale, Md: Curzon and Riverdale Co.; (5) Hofsten, E.A.G.v. and H. Lundstrom. (1976). Swedish population history: Main trends from 1750 to 1970. Stockholm: Statistiska centralbyran: LiberForlag; (6) Ajus, F. and M. Lindgren. (2012). Gapminder fertility dataset, 2010 (including documentation for Children per Woman (Total Fertility Rate) for countries and territories, Version 2. The Gapminder Foundation. Sweden, Stockholm. http://www.gapminder.org/data/documentation/gd008/. Data downloaded on 8 April 2012.
World Population Prospects: The 2019 Revision. http://population.un.org/wpp.
# NOT RUN {
data(tfr)
head(tfr)
data(tfrprojMed)
str(tfrprojMed)
# }
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