2022
DOI: 10.1007/s10680-022-09608-5
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Childlessness and Development in Sub-Saharan Africa: Is There Evidence for a U-shaped Pattern?

Abstract: In high-income countries, women increasingly remain permanently childless. Little is known about the relationship between childlessness and socioeconomic development in non-Western societies and particularly sub-Saharan Africa. At lower levels of development, poverty-driven (i.e., involuntary) childlessness may decrease with increases in levels of development, while at higher levels of development opportunity-driven (i.e., voluntary and circumstantial) childlessness may rise with development. Thus, we expect a… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(2 citation statements)
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References 74 publications
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“…A person's prospective fertility ideali.e., their ideal number of children before they have begun childbearingis likely shaped in part by how they view their future, and generally reflects the prevailing social norms about family and children. Voluntary childlessness in this region is rare, at less than 0.02 per cent (Verkroost and Monden, 2022). Thus, given the productive, affective and social benefits of having children in this region, young people in West Africa are likely to consider having at least a few children ideal.…”
Section: Background Rural Livelihoods Framework and Ideal Family Sizementioning
confidence: 99%
“…A person's prospective fertility ideali.e., their ideal number of children before they have begun childbearingis likely shaped in part by how they view their future, and generally reflects the prevailing social norms about family and children. Voluntary childlessness in this region is rare, at less than 0.02 per cent (Verkroost and Monden, 2022). Thus, given the productive, affective and social benefits of having children in this region, young people in West Africa are likely to consider having at least a few children ideal.…”
Section: Background Rural Livelihoods Framework and Ideal Family Sizementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Africa has an "infertility belt" that stretches across central Africa. This concept suggests that in this region, infertility is often most prevalent where fertility rates are also high [16][17][18][19]. The prevalence of infertility is difficult to determine.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%