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Teen pregnancy rates in Australia are at their lowest ever, according to the ABS.
“The trend has been going downwards for a number of years and now we have the lowest teen fertility rate on record,” ABS Demographer Alex Cleland told Mamamia.
In the last ten years teen pregnancy has steadily declined.
My mother fell pregnant when she was a teenager. Image supplied.
"If you go back to 1970 the rate was almost four times greater. By the 1990s it drops quite dramatically - it's almost halved, and it's dropped by about 50% since the 1990s," said Mr Cleland.
The decline may be because teenagers are choosing to study.
"There is a general trend for women to place a high level of value on education and continuing education. More women are choosing to get an education rather than focusing on starting a family," said Mr Cleland.
"It's difficult to point to a data item that proves that, but if you plot employment for young women and educational attainment you will see them increasing as the births are decreasing," he said.
My mother was still young when she sent me to school. Image supplied.
The US and the UK have both recently reported record low teen birth rates.
There was a 61% decrease in the birth rate for teenagers in the US since 1991 and the birth rate for teens has been decreasing across Europe since 2004, according to the British Office For National Stastistics.