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Title

Fertility among better-off women in sub-Saharan Africa: Nearing late transition levels across the region.

Authors

Corker, Jamaica; Rossier, Clémentine; Zan, Moussa Lonkila

Abstract

BACKGROUND While overall fertility across Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) is still high, fertility rates have been declining among educated and wealthier women in many countries since the 1970s. It is not clear whether, five decades later, consistently lower fertility among better-off women represents a distinct fertility regime among this subpopulation. OBJECTIVE To determine whether advantaged women (the best educated or wealthiest) in contemporary SSA have fertility characteristic of late (total fertility rate [TFR] 2.0-2.9) or mid-to-late (TFR 3.0-3.9) fertility transition levels. METHODS We use data from the Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) to calculate TFR for better-off women using six educational and wealth categories in 27 countries in SSA. RESULTS Women with completed secondary education (11% of the full sample) across SSA have late (2.0--2.9) or mid-to-late (3.0--3.9) TFR in 25 out of 27 sample countries (with an average TFR of 3.2). While better-educated women in higher-fertility countries (TFR>5) have somewhat higher fertility than their counterparts in lower-fertility settings (TFR<5), there is convergence towards similarly low fertility among highly educated women within countries with TFR <5. CONCLUSIONS Better-educated women across SSA today have fertility rates nearing late transition levels. Their fertility is only partly associated with the overall country fertility. CONTRIBUTIONS The finding that women in the upper social group in most countries in SSA are nearing the end of the fertility transition shows a more complex picture of fertility decline across the region than is commonly assumed. It shifts attention to understanding the intragroup differentials and diffusion processes that will impact the future path of fertility declines in the region.

Subjects

SUB-Saharan Africa; FERTILITY; FERTILITY decline; HUMAN fertility; DEMOGRAPHIC surveys; DEMOGRAPHIC transition; SOCIAL groups

Publication

Demographic Research, 2022, Vol 46, p849

ISSN

1435-9871

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.4054/DemRes.2022.46.29

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