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Kaiser 2011 & Morgan 2003

Kaiser 2011 - Does Family Planning Bring Down Fertility

  • Demographers: say that women’s lack of contraception keeps fertility high

    • Based on health surveys in developing countries

    • Unmet need

    • Important factors to consider: cultural taboos and fears of side effects (could be addressed only by intense public education campaigns

    • Strong government

  • Economists: say that family planning programs are a waste of money because fertility really depends on desired family size

    • Strongest predictors of a woman’s desired family size: income, education level, infant’s chances of surviving

    • So we should spend money on schooling, not family planning programs

  • Combination of both approaches!

  • Vaupel: argues that our lifespans will stay the same in the future

  • Olshansky: argues that our lifespans will decrease in the future

    • Our lifespans are guided by aspects of human biology that appear fairly fixed

Morgan 2003 - Is Low Fertility a Twenty-First-Century Demographic Crisis?

  • Total fertility rate: is declining below replacement levels

  • Women now have fewer children than they want and have children at late ages

  • Problem: dramatic population aging

Emerging Global Low Fertility

  • Only 16 countries are not showing evidence of a fertility transition

  • 64 countries have fertility at replacement level or below

  • 105 countries are experiencing fertility transitions

  • Only 2 countries have stopped their transition at a fertility level that is above the replacement level

Is Very Low Fertility Inevitable?

  • Bumpass: increased costs of children + idea that individuals should assess these costs and act in their self-interest

  • Campbell + Ryder: very low fertility is not inevitable

Low Versus High Parity Births

  • 75%-90% are 1st or 2nd births

  • Proportion of women who intend to have 2 children is dominant in most developed countries

  • First children: desired for affective reasons

  • Second children: for family building

  • Higher order births: economic functions

    • Socioeconomic change

  • Large families are now viewed as inconsistent with good parenting

  • Powerful trends toward individualism and self-actualization

  • Biological predispositions reinforce the desire for parenthood

Institutional Adjustments

  • Institutional adjustments can make small families feasible

  • Importance of affordable, quality child care to weaken the incompatibility of work and childbearing

  • Gender + technological changes that affect the division of household labour

An Integrative Framework

  • TFR: results from the population’s intended family size x set of factors reflecting unanticipated effects

  • Delayed childbearing: can lead to women not having all the children they intend

    • High levels of infecundity at older ages

  • Importance of public policy and institutional responses

Is Low Fertility A Crisis?

  • Low fertility is not a crisis, it’s a problem

  • Low fertility: causes rapidly aging populations

  • Multiphasic response

  • Societies that can respond to the legitimate needs of their citizens and invest in the next generations will approximate replacement-level fertility

C

Kaiser 2011 & Morgan 2003

Kaiser 2011 - Does Family Planning Bring Down Fertility

  • Demographers: say that women’s lack of contraception keeps fertility high

    • Based on health surveys in developing countries

    • Unmet need

    • Important factors to consider: cultural taboos and fears of side effects (could be addressed only by intense public education campaigns

    • Strong government

  • Economists: say that family planning programs are a waste of money because fertility really depends on desired family size

    • Strongest predictors of a woman’s desired family size: income, education level, infant’s chances of surviving

    • So we should spend money on schooling, not family planning programs

  • Combination of both approaches!

  • Vaupel: argues that our lifespans will stay the same in the future

  • Olshansky: argues that our lifespans will decrease in the future

    • Our lifespans are guided by aspects of human biology that appear fairly fixed

Morgan 2003 - Is Low Fertility a Twenty-First-Century Demographic Crisis?

  • Total fertility rate: is declining below replacement levels

  • Women now have fewer children than they want and have children at late ages

  • Problem: dramatic population aging

Emerging Global Low Fertility

  • Only 16 countries are not showing evidence of a fertility transition

  • 64 countries have fertility at replacement level or below

  • 105 countries are experiencing fertility transitions

  • Only 2 countries have stopped their transition at a fertility level that is above the replacement level

Is Very Low Fertility Inevitable?

  • Bumpass: increased costs of children + idea that individuals should assess these costs and act in their self-interest

  • Campbell + Ryder: very low fertility is not inevitable

Low Versus High Parity Births

  • 75%-90% are 1st or 2nd births

  • Proportion of women who intend to have 2 children is dominant in most developed countries

  • First children: desired for affective reasons

  • Second children: for family building

  • Higher order births: economic functions

    • Socioeconomic change

  • Large families are now viewed as inconsistent with good parenting

  • Powerful trends toward individualism and self-actualization

  • Biological predispositions reinforce the desire for parenthood

Institutional Adjustments

  • Institutional adjustments can make small families feasible

  • Importance of affordable, quality child care to weaken the incompatibility of work and childbearing

  • Gender + technological changes that affect the division of household labour

An Integrative Framework

  • TFR: results from the population’s intended family size x set of factors reflecting unanticipated effects

  • Delayed childbearing: can lead to women not having all the children they intend

    • High levels of infecundity at older ages

  • Importance of public policy and institutional responses

Is Low Fertility A Crisis?

  • Low fertility is not a crisis, it’s a problem

  • Low fertility: causes rapidly aging populations

  • Multiphasic response

  • Societies that can respond to the legitimate needs of their citizens and invest in the next generations will approximate replacement-level fertility