The population of Sarawak
Abstract
Sarawak is a multi-ethnic society in which six major communities/
each with distinctive cultural, social and economic conditions, could
be expected to have different demographic behaviours, levels and
changes in mortality and fertility. This thesis measures the
demographic differentials, dynamics of growth and change of population
among the six ethnic communities, and identifies the economic, social
and cultural factors influencing these trends and differentials.
The analysis shows substantial differences in mortality and
fertility among the six ethnic communities; differentials closely
linked to differences in life styles, living conditions, food supplies
and levels of nutrition, and accessibility to education and health
services. Demographic changes have occurred in all the communities
over the last two decades. Mortality and fertility levels declined.
The decline in the death rate started perhaps as early as the late
1940s, preceding the decline in birth rate in the 1960s. The decline
in the crude death rate was facilitated by a faster decline in infant
and childhood mortality. The rate of decline was faster among the
Land Dayak, Malays and Chinese than other communities. The decline in
the birth rate among most of the communities is the result of
interacting changes in age-sex structure, marital structure and, most
importantly, marital fertility. The decline has been greater among
the Chinese, Land Dayak and Malays. Contributing significantly to
changes in mortality and fertility are the rise of education and
literacy, the expansion of health services, the cultivation of perennial crops, the conversion of many of the pagan people to
Christianity, concomitant with accelerated social and economic
development beginning in the 1950s.
These background variables influence demographic behaviour
through a number of intermediate variables, and the thesis examines
the probable causal linkages between background and intermediate
variables and between the intermediate variables and demographic
levels, trends and differentials. Evidence indicates that variations
in the supporting role played by the background variables accounted
for the differentials in mortality and fertility in the various
communities.
Judging from the demographic behaviour of the communities, growth
of Sarawak's population during the next two decades will remain
substantial because the numerically large cohort of women born in the
1960s will be reaching their prime reproductive age and most of them
will marry and bear children. This is particularly the case for the
Land Dayak and Other Indigenous women, whose patterns of early
marriage and procreation lead to a short mean generation length, thus
accelerating the growth of the population. Mortality will continue to
decline but at a slower pace after reaching relatively low levels in
the 1990s. The decline in fertility will also be slow, especially if
improved social and economic conditions of the rural population raise
the level of fertility initially, counterbalancing the faster urban
fertility decline. Further intensive research on particular factors
causing fertility and mortality decline is needed in order to better
understand these demographic patterns.
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