Differential fertility in India : evidence from a survey in Karnataka State
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Balasubramanian, Krishnamurthy
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Abstract
Data collected in a sample survey of 1000 households in rural areas and 250 households in urban
areas of Kolar district in the Karnataka state, Southern India during 1975 are used to study the
fertility patterns and differentials among population groups defined
by certain background variables. The analysis revealed that significant differences in fertility
exist by religion, income, education and use
of contraception and only weak differences are found by family type, occupation of husband and
employment status of women. There exists a strong positive association between the number of
infants died and number of children born alive to ever-married women. The regression analysis
revealed that the socio-economic variables do explain a significant part in the total variation of
the number of children ever born.
Recent fertility surveys carried out in various parts of urban India have revealed the existence of
pronounced differences in fertility levels among population groups classified by certain important
socio-economic variables. But, we have little information on whether this is also true of rural
areas, because few fertility surveys carried out in rural areas of India have emphasised
differential fertility.
The present study should be considered as a contribution to our knowledge of fertility and
fertility determinants in a rural population of Southern India. The existence of fertility
differences by certain background variables is itself an indication that the onset of fertility
decline has already begun even in rural populations.
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