Type | Journal Article - ISS Working Paper Series/General Series |
Title | Changing patterns in determinants of fertility decline in China in the 1980's |
Author(s) | |
Volume | 304 |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 1999 |
Page numbers | 1-24 |
URL | http://repub.eur.nl/pub/19049/wp304.pdf |
Abstract | To study the mechanism of China’s fertility decline has drawn much and increasingly attention by demographers in recent years because of the fact that fertility decreased substantially in a short period of time. Some have asserted that China's fertility decline was largely due to the intensive family planning program, whereas socioeconomic development only played a minor role in this process which thus has been viewed as an "induced fertility transition" (Bongaarts and Greenhalgh 1985; Mauldin 1982). Some cross-sectional studies on the relationship between fertility and socioeconomic development and family planning factors, however, have shown that socioeconomic development also played an important role in the decline, apart from the role of family planning (Peng, 1992; Poston and Gu, 1987; Tien, 1984). The mechanism of fertility decline in China hence remains unclear and need further studies. The total fertility rate in China as a whole shows less variation in the 1980s than in the previous decade. However, substantial spatial difference in fertility remained in all years in the 1980s. More importantly, unlike the years before 1980, with the implementation of the policy of "reform and opening to the outside world" at the beginning of the 1980s, socio-economic and institutional settings in China as a whole have changed and improved greatly, while their regional diversity may even have widened, which inevitably affect the family planning efforts and other factors such as cultural and therefore the patterns of fertility. This provides a more reasonable base on which we can examine the extent to which the variations in socio-economic development, women's status and family planning efforts are related to the variations in fertility, and most importantly, its changes over time. Therefore, in this research, I propose to construct a causal model and use path analysis as the analytical tool to study provincial level fertility variations in 1981 and 1990 in order to unravel the causal effect of fertility change. After examining the contributions of socio-economic development, women's status and family planning efforts effect on fertility, a new concept patterns of determinants of fertility decline will be introduced in this research. Two patterns "fertility control" and "fertility influence" can be distinguished. The former is defined as a state in which the fertility decline or variation is largely due to some fertility control factors such as family planning efforts. Fertility influence is another pattern in which the fertility decline is largely due to the factors such as socio-economic development, whereas control factors only play a minor role. Of course, a mixed pattern, rather than pure fer- 2 tility control or pure fertility influence is possible. The reason for this is, I believe, that each pattern reflects the different mechanism or structure of fertility decline and, therefore, has significant different policy implications, at least in the case of China |
» | China - National Population Census 1982 |
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