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DESIRED FAMILY SIZE, FAMILY PLANNING AND FERTILITY IN ETHIOPIA

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 May 2007

ALOK BHARGAVA
Affiliation:
Department of Economics, University of Houston, Houston, TX, USA

Summary.

This paper models the proximate determinants of children born to over 13,000 Ethiopian women and of the women’s stated preferences for additional births using the data from the Ethiopian Demographic and Health Survey 2000. Empirical models for the number of children born to women were estimated using Poisson and ordinal regressions. The results show the importance of variables such as maternal education for smaller family size, and that variables reflecting desired family size are strong predictors of the numbers of children born to women. Secondly, binary logistic models for dichotomous variables for women not wanting more children and if getting pregnant would be a ‘big problem’ showed non-linear effects of the surviving and ‘ideal’ number of children. Moreover, the results indicated a desire on the part of women to limit family size, especially as the number of surviving children increased. Probit models were estimated to address potential endogeneity of certain variables. Overall, the results indicated that counselling couples about small family size and increasing the utilization of health care services can lower fertility in Ethiopia.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2006

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