Land holding education and desired family size in rural Nepal : the case of Shivaganj village
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Niraula, Bhanu Bhakta
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Canberra, ACT : The Australian National University
Abstract
This study examines the inter-relationships between
measures of socio-economic status and levels of fertility.
Socio-economic status is measured by ownership of land
holding, education, and caste/ethnicity. Levels of fertility
are measured by desired family size and number of children
ever born. The study is based on data collected from 241
households in a village in the eastern terai region of Nepal
during December-January 1986-1987. The sample consists of 107
female respondents and 134 male respondents.
Fertility is found to be a non-linear function of land
holding and education. Desired family size and children ever
born are found to be higher for those who owned land, rented
land from others, and were literate. To a certain degree,
both an increase in the size of land holding and schooling up
to five years are found to be associated with increasing
levels of fertility, after which fertility tends to decline.
There are no marked differentials in desired family size and
children ever born across categories of caste/ethnic
respondents, except for the indigeneous terai group. The
terai group has lower fertility than all other groups.
Economic and other expectations from children are high for all
categories of respondents except the higher schooling group,
underlining the importance of education.
The study village is in the first phase of fertility
transition. Although knowledge of contraception has reached a
wide spectrum of the society, only a quarter of all couples
were found to be contracepting . The latent demand for
contraception is thus considerable in the study village.
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