| Literature DB >> 7716797 |
R Freedman1, M C Chang, T H Sun.
Abstract
This article compares the fertility experience of Taiwanese in the eight years since the total fertility rate reached 2.1 with that before fertility reached replacement levels. During the earlier period, two-thirds of the fertility decline resulted from falling marital fertility and one-third from higher age at marriage. The changing age distribution retarded this decline. Since 1983, the further decline to 1.7-1.8 has been entirely the result of the trend toward later marriage. Older age distributions now facilitate the decline. Births postponed by those marrying later make the conventional TFR misleading. Computation based on parity-progression ratios raise TFRs from 1.7 to 2.0, a number less alarming to policymakers. Contraceptive prevalence is at saturation levels in all major populations strata. The "KAP-GAP" has disappeared. What would have happened without Taiwan's effective family planning program is impossible to determine, but clearly, contraceptive services supplied by the program were the major proximate cause of Taiwan's fertility decline.Entities:
Keywords: Age Distribution; Age Factors; Asia; Behavior; China; Demographic Factors; Demographic Transition; Developing Countries; Eastern Asia; Economic Factors; Educational Status; Family And Household; Family Characteristics; Family Planning; Family Planning Programs; Family Relationships; Family Size; Family Size, Desired; Fertility; Fertility Decline; Nuptiality; Policy; Population; Population Characteristics; Population Dynamics; Population Policy; Population Size; Psychological Factors; Rural Population; Sex Preference; Social Policy; Socioeconomic Factors; Socioeconomic Status; Sons; Taiwan; Urban Population; Value Orientation; Zero Population Growth
Mesh:
Year: 1994 PMID: 7716797
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stud Fam Plann ISSN: 0039-3665