Fertility and population policy in two counties in China 1980-1991

Authors
Citation
Nh. Thomas et Ap. Mu, Fertility and population policy in two counties in China 1980-1991, J BIOSOC SC, 32(1), 2000, pp. 125-140
Citations number
27
Categorie Soggetti
Public Health & Health Care Science
Journal title
JOURNAL OF BIOSOCIAL SCIENCE
ISSN journal
00219320 → ACNP
Volume
32
Issue
1
Year of publication
2000
Pages
125 - 140
Database
ISI
SICI code
0021-9320(200001)32:1<125:FAPPIT>2.0.ZU;2-4
Abstract
A survey of women in two highly developed rural counties of China, Sichuan and Jiangsu Provinces, was carried out in late 1991, to gain information ab out demographic and economic change between 1980 and 1990. Three separate s urveys were conducted: the first a questionnaire administered to married wo men aged 30-39, eliciting information about childbearing and contraception, as well as the social and economic background of the respondents; the seco nd, focus group interviews emphasizing the motivation for childbearing. Off icial information about the selected villages, townships and counties was a lso collected. National level data in 1987 show that individual reproductive behaviour in China failed to conform to a universal, effectively implemented, population policy. They imply either a spatial range of policies, or great diversity in the demand for children, or perhaps a combination of both. Such diversity in reproductive behaviour is also found in the study area. T he purpose of the analysis was to examine the diversity in reproductive beh aviour and contraceptive practice, and to discover whether differentials ar e influenced by area, or else exist between individuals within areas. If th e former, then the explanation may be found in differences in policy formul ation and implementation between areas: and if the latter, to demand for ch ildren, or else differential application of policy restrictions. The main findings were that: (1) the explanation of the pattern of fertilit y and contraceptive use is to be found at the individual level (within loca tions) rather than in policy differences between administrative units; (2) the association between income and number of children is negative, as is th at between income and the propensity for uniparous women to remain unsteril ized. The theory that privilege may be exercised to gain concessions from b irth planning cadres is therefore not supported; (3) ideal family size diff erentials are largely absent, showing that social (education) and economic (income, occupation) characteristics are not responsible for differences in reproductive motivations, and implying that the nature of the demand for c hildren is very different from that in most rural areas of the Third World; (4) data on ideal family size by sex of the existing offspring indicate on ly a weak preference for sons. The low demand for children, and the weak son preference. may both be expla ined by the social acceptability of uxorilocal marriages, and of village en dogamy, together with the prohibitive costs of children, and especially of sons. This partly results from the expense of education, but most mothers e mphasize marriage costs. It is speculated that the circumstances responsible for the escalating cost s of children in the two counties are likely to pertain in growing areas of the country, with the privatization of education and health services, the declining support of collective institutions, and the replacement of this f unction by kinship networks. These on-going changes imply that any policy of reproductive restriction fo r the purposes of population control is likely soon to meet with diminishin g resistance: and it may later be rendered unnecessary in the eyes of gover nment officials, as fulfilled reproductive intentions lead to a fertility l evel below replacement level.