Reducing Fertility Rates Coercion or Reward?

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Reducing Fertility Rates Coercion or Reward? Laura Dininni Stutee Khandelwal

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Reducing Fertility Rates Coercion or Reward?. Laura Dininni Stutee Khandelwal. Global Population Growth. Fertility rates. TFR-Total Fertility Rate. Indicators associated with higher fertility. high rates of female illiteracy low female status a high percentage of illegal marriages - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Reducing Fertility Rates Coercion or Reward?

Page 1: Reducing Fertility Rates Coercion or Reward?

Reducing Fertility RatesCoercion or Reward?

Laura DininniStutee Khandelwal

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Global Population Growth

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Fertility rates

TFR-Total Fertility Rate

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Indicators associated with higher fertility

high rates of female illiteracylow female statusa high percentage of illegal marriages

under age 18

modest level of contraceptive useand high rates of infant mortality

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Population control policy

IncentivesPositive Incentives • rewards or penalties, tangible or intangible,

to induce specific fertility behavior by altering parental choice

• Serve to enlarge option. Individual has a right to deny.

Negative Incentive/Disincentives• Withdrawal/suspension of the rewards or

penalties

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Direct IncentivesCash payments-

to women for not having pregnancyto men for undergoing Voluntary Surgical ContraceptionEmployee Benefit Package

Non Cash-Priority to housingEducational placement of childrenTax advantages

Rewards to Community-Improved infrastructure

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Indirect Incentives

Increased Educational opportunities for womenIncreased labor force opportunitiesSocial pressure campaignsLowering infant and childhood mortalityDisadvantages:

must be supplemented by direct incentivesslower than direct

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Disincentives

Negative IncentivesWithdrawal of maternity benefitsLimitation of services providedDebarred from contesting local elections

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Effectiveness

Never used alone.Not much success in India.

Lack of fundingLack of government support

Success in China and Indonesia where disincentives and coercion as wellThe focus on much broader issues- education (Kerela), good leadership (Indonesia), socio-economic development (Japan), decline in mortality (China) etc.

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Coercion

definitionIncentive and disincentive programs raise ethical and practical questions

Is it ethicalWill it work

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Incentives disincentives reward and coercionAre incentives inherently coerciveCritical factors such as socioeconomic statusGenderType of incentiveMeans by which they are enforcedCan turn incentives into compulsory measures

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Generally, pop pol is most effective when public opinion supports the policy goalsSingapore

Balance between rights of people and national goals for population stabilizationCollective vs individual rights“Governments are justified in employing measures that seek to curb population growth and in directing their residents to comply with such objectives”

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Gender inequalityImplications in coercive population policyCompromises necessary to attain such population goals are often borne by women who must modify their reproductive behavior or have it modified for themLeads to serious infractions of human rightsInternationally and domesticallyPolitical inequality

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Effectiveness of coercion

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Conclusion

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Solutions-lauraIncentive and disincentive policies must:Take into account shifts in population trends

What is goalWhat is timelineUrban vs rural focusGentrification of society China example

Assess impact of Gender in/equalityprograms may ..projecting the image of the gfirl child as an asset to the family rather than a liabilityHave correct targetInvolve choice and empowermentIncrease women’s economic security

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Solutions-StuteeCultural factors - gender, religion, societal customsComprehensive reproductive health care-holistic approach, socio-cultural taboos, accessStrong government/leadershipSocio-cultural climateWomen’s rights

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Education

Delay in exposure to intercourseAlternatives in life to early marriageChanges people’s thinking Problem based learning, Skits, T.V, Radio

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BibliographyMinnesotans for Sustainibility. The Cairo Conference on Population and Development. August, 1994. <http://www.mnforsustain.org/mann_d_cairo_conference_on_pop_and_development.htm#Non-Coercive%20Incentives>Weeks, John R. How To Influence Fertility: The Experience So Far (1990). November 16, 2004. http://dieoff.org/page35.htmThe Wall Street Journal. Fertility “Revolution” Lowers Birth Rates. January 24, 2003. http://www.mongabay.com/external/WSJ-Fertilty_Revolution.htmLaigen, L. The Greatest Modern Threat to Reproductive Freedom. November 16, 2004. <http://www.fnsa.org/v1n2/liagin1.html>

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Questions???