The geography of changing fertility in Myanmar
The geography of changing fertility in Myanmar
BACKGROUND: Between 1983 and 2014, the total fertility rate in Myanmar declined from 4.7 to 2.3 children per woman. Previous analyses of fertility decline in the country suggest that the decline varied regionally, but the geography of the decline has not been formally assessed.
METHODS: Using data from the 1983 and 2014 censuses, we examine fertility trends and geospatial patterns in fertility decline in Myanmar during the intercensal period, and investigate the aggregate socioeconomic factors underlying fertility decline at sub-regional levels.
RESULTS: Between 1983 and 2014, fertility change at sub-regional level was characterised by a precipitous decline in fertility rates in the broad central valley areas and a much weaker decline in remote, peripheral areas. Regression analysis of the 2014 census data, adjusting for state/region level variances, reveals a strong negative correlation between fertility and access to modern communication technologies. District level female education and road connectivity were also associated with fertility.
CONCLUSIONS: The geographical diversity in Myanmar’s fertility transition has intensified over time, as fertility decline is concentrated in areas with greater development, higher socioeconomic status and better connectivity to information networks.
CONTRIBUTION: A district’s digital connectivity, measured through access to communication technologies, was a better predictor of fertility than other traditional measures. There is a need to explore to what extent digital connectivity is a proxy indicator for levels of modernisation and access to family planning and reproductive health services, and the extent to which it measures the intensity of social networks and the diffusion of information.
Fertility, Connectivity, Myanmar
37
Schuster, Anne
a1eb30c3-3cb2-4db0-a9de-b64bb341a899
Padmadas, Sabu
64b6ab89-152b-48a3-838b-e9167964b508
Hinde, Andrew
0691a8ab-dcdb-4694-93b4-40d5e71f672d
3 July 2019
Schuster, Anne
a1eb30c3-3cb2-4db0-a9de-b64bb341a899
Padmadas, Sabu
64b6ab89-152b-48a3-838b-e9167964b508
Hinde, Andrew
0691a8ab-dcdb-4694-93b4-40d5e71f672d
Schuster, Anne, Padmadas, Sabu and Hinde, Andrew
(2019)
The geography of changing fertility in Myanmar.
Demographic Research, 41 (2), .
(doi:10.4054/DemRes.2019.41.2).
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Between 1983 and 2014, the total fertility rate in Myanmar declined from 4.7 to 2.3 children per woman. Previous analyses of fertility decline in the country suggest that the decline varied regionally, but the geography of the decline has not been formally assessed.
METHODS: Using data from the 1983 and 2014 censuses, we examine fertility trends and geospatial patterns in fertility decline in Myanmar during the intercensal period, and investigate the aggregate socioeconomic factors underlying fertility decline at sub-regional levels.
RESULTS: Between 1983 and 2014, fertility change at sub-regional level was characterised by a precipitous decline in fertility rates in the broad central valley areas and a much weaker decline in remote, peripheral areas. Regression analysis of the 2014 census data, adjusting for state/region level variances, reveals a strong negative correlation between fertility and access to modern communication technologies. District level female education and road connectivity were also associated with fertility.
CONCLUSIONS: The geographical diversity in Myanmar’s fertility transition has intensified over time, as fertility decline is concentrated in areas with greater development, higher socioeconomic status and better connectivity to information networks.
CONTRIBUTION: A district’s digital connectivity, measured through access to communication technologies, was a better predictor of fertility than other traditional measures. There is a need to explore to what extent digital connectivity is a proxy indicator for levels of modernisation and access to family planning and reproductive health services, and the extent to which it measures the intensity of social networks and the diffusion of information.
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Geography of Changing Fertility in Myanmar ACCEPTED
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Accepted/In Press date: 22 May 2019
Published date: 3 July 2019
Keywords:
Fertility, Connectivity, Myanmar
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Local EPrints ID: 431404
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/431404
PURE UUID: 7d910f50-3b3f-498f-90eb-1d4febfb3f75
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Date deposited: 31 May 2019 16:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 07:53
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Author:
Anne Schuster
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