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Women's Education and Fertility: Results from 26 Demographic and Health Surveys

475

Citations

21

References

1995

Year

TLDR

The study updates the relationship between women’s education and fertility and investigates its influence on age at marriage, family‑size preference, and contraceptive use. The authors analyze Demographic and Health Survey data from 26 countries.

Abstract

This article presents an updated overview of the relationship between women's education and fertility. Data from the Demographic and Health Surveys for 26 countries are examined. The analysis confirms that higher education is consistently associated with lower fertility. However, a considerable diversity exists in the magnitude of the gap between upper and lower educational strata and in the strength of the association. In some of the least-developed countries, education might have a positive impact on fertility at the lower end of the educational range. Yet, compared with patterns documented a decade ago, the fertility-enhancing impact of schooling has become increasingly rare. The study also examines the impact of female education on age at marriage, family-size preference, and contraceptive use. It confirms that education enhances women's ability to make reproductive choices.

References

YearCitations

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