For the past seven decades, high fertility and poverty have been strongly correlated, and the world’s poorest countries also have the highest fertility and population growth rates.
Lower birth rates, a major component of population growth (mortality and migration are other determinants), do not, by themselves, guarantee greater prosperity. But they do make economic gains more feasible. Smaller families improve economic prospects for the household, and longer birth intervals improve child and maternal health, generating benefits over children’s entire life course. In addition, smaller families enable more women to join the labour force or engage in other entrepreneurial activities.
At the aggregate level, lower population growth may reduce the pressure on national resources and the need for social investments. Over the longer term, smaller families change the age structures of both families and countries in which they live. For example, in Brazil, the effect at the household level is estimated to account for as much as a third of recent poverty reduction.1
Conversely, rapid population growth contributes to an increase of inequality. And, rising out of poverty is more difficult for larger than for smaller families. 2
At the country level, economic benefits from lowered fertility are possible because a larger proportion of people are of working age relative to older and younger people. When the working population is relatively large and policies foster job creation, countries can build human and physical capital. However, economists caution that these benefits are not automatic and that they depend on appropriate institutional environments.
The ability to plan how many children to have and when to have them is a recognized human right. However, universal access to contraceptives is not yet a reality — especially among the poorest. Worldwide, 200 million women would like to delay or prevent pregnancy, but are not using effective contraception. Simply meeting this ‘unmet need’ for contraception would go a long way toward lowering fertility.
Demand for family planning is expected to soar in the next 15 years as millions of young people become sexually active and smaller families become the norm in many countries. But funding for family planning is declining, and has been doing so for more than a decade.
As most developing countries recognize, committed and focused policies and programmes are urgently needed to moderate population growth as quickly as possible, thusingthus enhancing economic growth and easing demands on social services.
WHAT NEEDS TO BE DONE
- Because population growth and poverty go hand in hand, interventions should attempt to address both issues simultaneously.
- Meeting unmet need for contraception is a critical. But in many countries, where large families are still the norm, options for women need to be expanded so that they have valued social roles beyond motherhood.
- Support child health initiatives. When people are convinced that all of their children will survive, they often desire fewer. Similarly, provide social safety nets so people do not need to rely on large families for security in old age.
- Make sure couples have the ability to exercise their right to plan their families. This requires universal access to contraception education and materials, as well as to counselling in sexuality, health and reproductive rights.
- Pay special attention to the needs of the poorest, who typically have the least access to information, services and supplies.
- Energize high-level political and financial commitment to promote family planning at the global, regional, national and local levels. NGOs and civil society are crucial to this work.
- Encourage governments in poor countries to follow through on the population and family planning policies that most have adopted, and, where appropriate, to work with governments and religious and community leaders to change social norms that favour large families.
- Support data collection, analysis and research, so that information about population trends can inform policymaking.
Links between the ICPD and the Millennium Development Goals
The International Conference on Population and Development deals specifically with the many interconnecting and inextricable links between population, sustained economic growth and sustainable development.
While the Millennium Development Goals do not explicitly address population issues, high fertility is undermining prospects of reaching many of them. In most of Africa, high fertility and population growth rates pose a greater threat than HIV to reducing poverty and achieving the Millennium Development Goals. Rapid population growth will make the goals on poverty reduction (MDG1), universal education (MDG2), gender equality (MDG3) and environmental sustainability (MDG7) difficult for countries to achieve. At the household level, smaller families can directly improve prospects for gender equality (MDG3), fewer child deaths (MDG4) and maternal health (MDG5). Contraceptive services, especially male and female condoms, can contribute to HIV reduction (MDG6).
Pregnant (Again) and Poor
(From April 5 Op Ed in the New York Times by Nicholas D. Kristof)
For all the American and international efforts to fight global poverty, one thing is clear: Those efforts won’t get far as long as women like Nahomie Nercure continue to have 10 children.
Global family-planning efforts have stalled over the last couple of decades, and Nahomie is emblematic both of the lost momentum and of the poverty that results. She is an intelligent 30-year-old woman who wanted only two children, yet now she is eight months pregnant with her 10th.
As we walked through Cité Soleil, the Haitian slum where she lives, her elementary-school-age children ran stark naked around her. The $6-a-month rental shack that they live in — four sleep on the bed, six on the floor beside it — has no food of any kind in it. The family has difficulty paying the fees to keep the children in school. more
1 Hakkert, Ralph. Potential Contributions to the MDG Agenda from the Perspective of ICPD: A Reference Guide to Evidence for Policy Dialogue in the LAC Region, 200, UNFPA, Ipea page 67
2 Hakkert, op cit page 57
3 Goldman Sachs: Women Hold Up Half the Sky, March 2008, accessed April 2009 www2.goldmansachs.com/ideas/demographic-change/women-hold-up-half-the-sky.html
4 World Population Policies (2007) UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population Division
5 World Population Policies (2007) UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population Division
6 The World in 2050 (The Fred Bixby Forum held in Jan, 2009) http://www.prb.org/Journalists/Webcasts/worldin2050/worldin2050-overview.aspx
7 Hakkert, op cit page 84
8 Guttmacher Institute, UNFPA. Contraception: An Investment in Lives, Health and Development. 2008 Series.
9 2005 SWOP page 2
10 $64.7 Billion Needed for Population Programmes to Curb Poverty http://www.unfpa.org/public/News/pid/2441
11 Guttmacher Institute, UNFPA. Contraception: An Investment in Lives, Health and Development. 2008 Series.
12 Goldman Sachs, op cit
13 Guttmacher, op cit
14 Guttmacher, op cit