Fertility decline in a traditional society : a case of Bali
Abstract
In the late 1970s a number of reports indicated that the
Indonesian Family Planning Program had contributed to a rapid and
substantial fertility decline in Bali. The high fertility setting in
Bali into which the program was introduced around 1970, did not appear
to be conducive to a small family norm and thus to such a fertility
decline. Socially, Bali was still effectively traditional;
economically, there had been little development in the areas usually
considered, in demographic transition theory, prerequisite for
fertility decline.
This thesis describes a village study undertaken to examine the
questions of the apparent changes in fertility, and the apparent
dramatic rise in family planning use; and if such changes were
verified, to attempt to elucidate the underlying reasons. The study
is based primarily on a survey of 1,088 ever-married women aged 15 to
54 years in three villages in the traditional regency of Klungkung,
Bali.
The findings are that fertility in these villages had indeed
fallen dramatically, from a total fertility rate of 6.5 in the late
1960s to 3.5 in the late 1970s. During this period family planning
prevalence had increased from less than 5 percent to around 50 percent
of eligible couples. The analysis indicates that almost all the
fertility decline was the result of program family planning use. The
virtual absence of differentials in both fertility and family planning
use led to a conclusion emphasizing the critical importance of
Balinese cultural factors in the rapidity of the uptake of family planning, and the subsequent change in fertility behaviour. While
credit is given to the family planning program for efficient
implementation, the conclusion is that the Balinese communities
readily accepted the concept of family planning and fertility
limitation as a potentially fruitful approach to alleviate the current
problems of limited resources, particularly land, and to achieve the
aspirations stemming from the modernizing changes of recent years.
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