Factors Contributing to Fertility Decline in Nepal
รหัสดีโอไอ
Creator Kushum Shakya and Bhakta Gubhaju
Title Factors Contributing to Fertility Decline in Nepal
Publisher The Thai Association of the Population and Social Researchers
Publication Year 2559
Journal Title Journal of Population and Social Studies (JPSS)
Journal Vol. 24
Journal No. 1
Page no. 13 - 29
Keyword fertility, age at marriage, contraceptive prevalence, male migration, induced abortion
ISSN ISSN 2465-4418 (Online)
Abstract While the fertility transition in Nepal started in the 1980s, the decline was rather modest until the early 1990s. Nepal witnessed a sustained decline in fertility, falling from 5.1 children per woman in 1991 to 4.6 in 1996 and 4.1 in 2001, with a further drop to 3.1 in 2006 and 2.6 in 2011. Reduction of fertility by half in two decades (from 5.1 in 1991 to 2.6 in 2011) and by one child per woman in five years (4.1 in 2001 to 3.1 in 2006) is a remarkable achievement. Fertility in urban areas has reached an ultra-low level of 1.6 as compared with 2.8 in rural areas. Women completing School Leaving Certificates have also experienced ultra-low fertility of 1.7. This paper examines fertility levels, trends and differentials. It also employs a decomposition analysis technique to determine the components of changes in total fertility rate (TFR) due to marital structure and marital fertility, covering the inter-survey periods, 1991-1996, 1996-2001, 2001-2006 and 2006-2011. Results show that during the period of 1991-1996, marital structure contributed to the rise in fertility, which was more than counterbalanced by the negative influence of the decline in marital fertility. In the later periods, while changes in marital structure began to play some role in the fertility decline, the contribution of marital fertility was still more pronounced. Rise in contraceptive use has been the primary reason for fertility decline. Age at marriage has begun to rise slowly. However, most recently, contraceptive use has not increased to explain the continuous fall in fertility. Factors such as an increase in male migration and induced abortion have been suggested as causes of the continued decline in fertility.
Journal of Population and Social Studies

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