Fertility Preferences and Contraceptive Change in Low‐ and Middle‐Income Countries
Family Characteristics
Population Dynamics
1. No poverty
Articles
03 medical and health sciences
Contraception
Fertility
0302 clinical medicine
Contraceptive Agents
Family Planning Services
Humans
Female
Child
Contraception Behavior
Developing Countries
DOI:
10.1111/sifp.12202
Publication Date:
2022-11-24T13:11:09Z
AUTHORS (3)
ABSTRACT
AbstractThe past four decades have witnessed an enormous increase in modern contraception in most low‐ and middle‐income countries. We examine the extent to which this change can be attributed to changes in fertility preferences versus fuller implementation of fertility preferences, a distinction at the heart of intense debates about the returns to investments in family planning services. We analyze national survey data from five major survey programs: World Fertility Surveys, Demographic Health Surveys, Reproductive Health Surveys, Pan‐Arab Project for Child Development or Family Health, and Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys. We perform regression decomposition of change between successive surveys in 59 countries (330 decompositions in total). Change in preferences accounts for little of the change: less than 10 percent in a basic decomposition and about 15 percent under a more elaborate specification. This is a powerful empirical refutation of the view that contraceptive change has been driven principally by reductions in demand for children. We show that this outcome is not surprising given that the distribution of women according to fertility preferences is surprisingly stable over time.
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