Title: Recent Trends of Fertility in Egypt
1Recent Trends of Fertility in Egypt
- Henriette Engelhardt
- Vienna Institute of Demography
- Task Force Meeting on
- Population, Human Capital and Water in Egypt
- IIASA, Austria
- August 9-10, 2004
2- Roadmap
- Development of fertility
- Explanations of stalled fertility decline
- Data
- Empirical evidence
- Age misreporting
- Summary
3Total fertility rate per women in Egypt
4- Stalled fertility decline in Egypt
- Eltigani (2003) analysed, whether the recent
fertility stalling is because of the stalling in
TFR of particular population segments. - In particular, members of the low socioeconomic
class are expected to change their reproductive
behaviour only if there is structural change
(i.e., improvement) in their socioeconomic
conditions. - Descriptive results indicate that the
reproductive behaviour of women from high and
middle class households seem to be responsible
for stalling of the TFR.
5- Alternative explanation for stalled fertility
decline - TFR Average number of births a women would have
if she were to live through her reproductive
years and bear children at each age at the rates
observed in a particular year. - Bongaarts and Feeney (1998)
- TFRi TFRi (1 - ri)
- TFRi total fertility at order i in the absence
of changes in timing - ri change in the mean age at childbearing of
order i - If childbearing is postponed and, subsequently,
the mean age at childbearing increases, the
observed total fertility rate is lower than in
the absence of such timing changes. - Thus, the observed stalling of total fertility in
Egypt can also be caused by a change in the
timing of first and subsequent births.
6- Data
- Egypt Demographic and Health Surveys (EDHS)
- Nationally representative surveys of ever-married
women between ages of 15 and 49 - 1992 EDHS 9,864 respondents from 10,760
households - 1995 EDHS 14,779 respondents from 15,567
households - 2000 EDHS 15,573 respondents from 16,957
households
7Age-specific fertility and total fertility rates
of women in Egypt (15-49)
8Trends in the mean age at marriage and in the
mean age at birth among ever married women
9 Mean age at birth calculated from the birth and
exposure frequencies for the three years
proceeding the survey
10 Observed and tempo adjusted total fertility rate
per women in Egypt
11 Observed total fertility rate by parity
12 Observed and tempo adjusted fertility rate at
parity one
13 Observed and tempo adjusted fertility rate at
parity two
14 Observed and tempo adjusted fertility rate at
parity three
15 Observed and tempo adjusted fertility rate at
parity four
16 Observed and tempo adjusted fertility rate at
parity five
17 Observed and tempo adjusted fertility rate at
parity six
18 Observed and tempo adjusted fertility rate at
parity seven
19 Observed and tempo adjusted fertility rate at
parity eight
20 Distribution of Ever-Married Women by Single Year
of Age
21 Distribution of Ever-Married Women by Single Year
of Age and Education, 2000
22Distribution of Ever-Married Women by Single Year
of Age and Urban-Rural Residence, 2000
23Distribution of Ever-Married Women by Single Year
of Age and Place of Residence, 2000
24Quality of age-reporting Index for measuring
digit preferecnde of 0 and 5 and age heaping
25Whipples Index for age distributions of
ever-married women aged 15-49
26- Summary
- Stalling of fertility decline can only be found
in grouped data. - When using ungrouped data no stalling of
fertility decline. - When looking at the TFR there seems to no tempo
effect since the mid of the 1990s. - When looking at parity specific TFRs there seems
to be a tempo effect which decreases by partiy. - Total fertility for partiy 1, 2 and 3 is
increasing since 1990. - Total fertility for higher parities is decreasing.
27- However, ...
- To assess the tempo effect one should take care
of age misreporting. - This could be done by concentrating on
respondents who reported the year of birth. This
answer seems to be more valid than the
information on the age of the respondent.
28Fertility indicators of ever married women in
Egypt
29Total fertility rate by place of residence
30 Total fertility rate by highest educational level