WASHINGTON — The Pew Research Center on Tuesday released a massive, 35,000-person survey on the state of religion in America. The topline findings of this year’s release are the twin trends of declining adherence to Christian religions, and the rise of the religiously unaffiliated.
But there are plenty of other interesting nuggets in the latest survey, too. One that caught my eye: the stark differences in fertility rates between members of various religious traditions.
According to Pew’s data, the average Mormon can expect to make 3.4 babies in his or her lifetime. Jews, Catholics and most flavors of Protestantism have fertility rates ranging from 2 to 2.5. At the low end of the baby-making spectrum you’ve got atheists, with 1.6 kids, and agnostics, who average only 1.3.
On the face of it, this flies against the study’s main finding: if atheists and agnostics are having so few kids, how are their numbers increasing? The answer is many of the religiously unaffiliated are not born, but rather made: many Americans are leaving their faiths and not picking up a new one.