The important question now arises. Is the desire uniform through all
classes of Society, and is the practice of prevention uniform through
all classes?
In other words, is the decline in the birth-rate due to prevention in
one class more than in another, and if so which?
Experience and statistics force us to the startling conclusion, that the
birth-rate is declining amongst the best classes of citizens, and
remains undisturbed amongst the worst.
Now the first-class responsible for the decline includes those who do
not marry, and those who marry late. The Michigan vital statistics for
1894 (p. 125) show that the mean number of children to each marriage at
the age of 15-19 years is 6.75, at the age of 20-25 years it is 5.32, a
difference of 1.44 in favour of delayed marriage for a period of five
years.
In New Zealand the marriage rate has gone up from 5.97 per thousand
persons living in 1888 to 7.67 in 1900.
This class includes clerks with an income of L100 and under,--a large
number with L150, and all misogynists with higher incomes.
It includes labourers with L75 a year and under, and many who receive
L100.
Their motives for avoiding marriage are mostly prudential.
Those who abstain from marriage for prudential reasons are as a rule
good citizens.
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