10.17045/sthlmuni.5688625.v1 Martin Kolk Martin Kolk Kieron Barclay Kieron Barclay Cognitive ability and fertility amongst Swedish men. Evidence from 18 cohorts of military conscription Stockholm University 2017 Fertility Sweden.Results 1 112 cases Cognitive ability Intelligence Conscription Data Stockholm Reports in Demography Sociologiska institutionen Department of Sociology SUDA Stockholm University Demography Unit Stockholms universitets demografiska avdelning Demography not elsewhere classified Sociology 2017-12-11 15:25:53 Preprint https://su.figshare.com/articles/preprint/Cognitive_ability_and_fertility_amongst_Swedish_men_Evidence_from_18_cohorts_of_military_conscription/5688625 <b>Abstract: </b>We examine the relationship between cognitive ability and childbearing patterns in contemporary Sweden using administrative register data. The topic has a long history in the social sciences and has been the topic of a large number of studies, many arguing for a negative gradient between intelligence and fertility. We link fertility histories to military conscription tests with intelligences scores for all Swedish born men born 1951 to 1967. We find an overall positive relationship between intelligence scores and fertility and that is consistent across our cohorts. The relationship is most pronounced for transition to a first child, and that men with the lowest categories of IQ-scores have the fewest children. Using fixed effects models we additionally control for all factors that are shared across siblings, and after such adjustments we find a stronger positive relationship between IQ and fertility. Furthermore, we find a positive gradient within groups of different lengths of education. Compositional differences of this kind are therefore not responsible for the positive gradient we observe - instead the relationship is even stronger after controlling for both educational careers and parental background factors. In our models where we compare brothers to one another we find that relative to men with IQ 100, the group with the lowest IQ scores have 0.58 fewer children, and men with the highest IQ scores have 0.14 more children.