Trends in fertility and fertility preferences in sub-Saharan Africa: the roles of education and family planning programs

Abstract A common explanation for the high fertility prevailing in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) is a widespread desire for large families. This situation poses a challenge to population policy-makers in the continent. If the desired family size is high, then presumably family planning programs can only...

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Main Author: John Bongaarts
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2020-09-01
Series:Genus
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s41118-020-00098-z
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author John Bongaarts
author_facet John Bongaarts
author_sort John Bongaarts
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description Abstract A common explanation for the high fertility prevailing in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) is a widespread desire for large families. This situation poses a challenge to population policy-makers in the continent. If the desired family size is high, then presumably family planning programs can only have a limited effect on fertility because these programs aim to assist women in achieving their reproductive goals. But this conclusion is based on the assumption that family planning programs do not affect the desired family size, which is questionable and is investigated here. This study examines the determinants of trends wanted and unwanted fertility in SSA using fixed-effects regressions of country-level data. The dependent variables include the total fertility rate, and its wanted and unwanted components. Explanatory variables include a family planning program score and four socioeconomic variables (women’s educational attainment, child mortality, GNI per capita, and percent urban). Data come from 103 DHS surveys in 25 countries in SSA with at least two DHS surveys between 1989 and 2019. Women’s education and family planning programs are found to be the dominant determinants of fertility decline and their effects operate by reducing both wanted and unwanted fertility. The effects of education are not surprising but the finding that family planning programs can reduce wanted fertility implies that their impact can be larger than conventional wisdom suggests. Indeed, in a few poor countries, the implementation of high-quality programs has been associated with substantial declines in wanted fertility (e.g., Ethiopia, Malawi, Rwanda). The mechanism through which this effect operates is unclear but likely involves media programs that diffuse knowledge about the benefits of smaller families.
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spelling doaj.art-bc5f01ce1a7d444ca2c7b83783e84c462022-12-22T00:20:56ZengSpringerOpenGenus2035-55562020-09-0176111510.1186/s41118-020-00098-zTrends in fertility and fertility preferences in sub-Saharan Africa: the roles of education and family planning programsJohn Bongaarts0Population CouncilAbstract A common explanation for the high fertility prevailing in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) is a widespread desire for large families. This situation poses a challenge to population policy-makers in the continent. If the desired family size is high, then presumably family planning programs can only have a limited effect on fertility because these programs aim to assist women in achieving their reproductive goals. But this conclusion is based on the assumption that family planning programs do not affect the desired family size, which is questionable and is investigated here. This study examines the determinants of trends wanted and unwanted fertility in SSA using fixed-effects regressions of country-level data. The dependent variables include the total fertility rate, and its wanted and unwanted components. Explanatory variables include a family planning program score and four socioeconomic variables (women’s educational attainment, child mortality, GNI per capita, and percent urban). Data come from 103 DHS surveys in 25 countries in SSA with at least two DHS surveys between 1989 and 2019. Women’s education and family planning programs are found to be the dominant determinants of fertility decline and their effects operate by reducing both wanted and unwanted fertility. The effects of education are not surprising but the finding that family planning programs can reduce wanted fertility implies that their impact can be larger than conventional wisdom suggests. Indeed, in a few poor countries, the implementation of high-quality programs has been associated with substantial declines in wanted fertility (e.g., Ethiopia, Malawi, Rwanda). The mechanism through which this effect operates is unclear but likely involves media programs that diffuse knowledge about the benefits of smaller families.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s41118-020-00098-z
spellingShingle John Bongaarts
Trends in fertility and fertility preferences in sub-Saharan Africa: the roles of education and family planning programs
Genus
title Trends in fertility and fertility preferences in sub-Saharan Africa: the roles of education and family planning programs
title_full Trends in fertility and fertility preferences in sub-Saharan Africa: the roles of education and family planning programs
title_fullStr Trends in fertility and fertility preferences in sub-Saharan Africa: the roles of education and family planning programs
title_full_unstemmed Trends in fertility and fertility preferences in sub-Saharan Africa: the roles of education and family planning programs
title_short Trends in fertility and fertility preferences in sub-Saharan Africa: the roles of education and family planning programs
title_sort trends in fertility and fertility preferences in sub saharan africa the roles of education and family planning programs
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s41118-020-00098-z
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