Women's empowerment and fertility preferences in Southeast Asia

Type Thesis or Dissertation - Doctor of Philosophy
Title Women's empowerment and fertility preferences in Southeast Asia
Author(s)
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2016
URL http://ses.library.usyd.edu.au/handle/2123/15251
Abstract
In this thesis I examine the relationship between women’s empowerment and fertility
preferences of women in four Southeast Asian countries, including Cambodia; Indonesia;
the Philippines and East Timor, using data from the Demographic and Health Surveys.
First, micro data are utilized to create measurement models for women’s empowerment
using principal axis factoring. Three factors of women’s empowerment are found, which
are women’s labor force participation, women’s education and women’s household
decision-making. Second, these three women’s empowerment factors are examined to see
if they have any associations with women’s fertility preference, measured by the ideal
number of children and the ideal number of sons. Results from OLS, Poisson and ordered
logit models show that women’s empowerment has significant and negative association
with the ideal number of children and the ideal number of sons in the four countries of
study.
This research overcomes current obstacles in the operationalization of women’s
empowerment by moving from the aggregate to the individual level using data from
developing countries. The results of this study suggest that female labor force
participation is the key in keeping fertility at a balanced level, and son preference is
mostly associated with inside-the-household factors such as household decision-making
rather than outside-the-household factors such as education and employment. All in all,
the impacts of women's empowerment on fertility decision-making are more
differentiated than the theoretical literature might suggest, relating specific types of
empowerment to specific types of fertility preference.

Related studies

»