Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-mlc7c Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-17T21:20:49.908Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

ENDURING ECONOMIC HARDSHIP, WOMEN'S EDUCATION, MARRIAGE AND FERTILITY TRANSITION IN KINSHASA

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 March 2014

DAVID SHAPIRO*
Affiliation:
Department of Economics, Pennsylvania State University, USA

Summary

This paper examines fertility transition in Kinshasa, capital of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) and second-largest city in sub-Saharan Africa. Shapiro (1996) documented the onset of fertility transition in the city, using data from 1990. Women's education was strongly inversely related to fertility, beginning with secondary schooling, and increases in women's education were important in initiating fertility transition in the city. The paper uses data from the 2007 Demographic and Health Survey in the DRC to examine fertility in Kinshasa and assess fertility transition since 1990, a period characterized by severe adverse economic conditions in the DRC. Fertility transition has continued at a strong pace. In part this reflects increased educational attainment of women, but it appears also to be largely a consequence of enduring economic hardship. The ongoing fertility decline has been accompanied by substantial delays in entry to marriage and childbearing, reflecting adverse economic conditions, which in turn have contributed to continuing declines in fertility.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2014 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Agyei-Mensah, S. (2006) Fertility transition in Ghana: looking back and looking forward. Population, Space and Place 12, 461477.Google Scholar
Antoine, P. (2006) Analyse biographique de la transformation des modèles matrimoniaux dans quatre capitales africaines: Antananarivo, Dakar, Lomé et Yaoundé. Cahiers québecois de démographie 35, 538.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Becker, G. S. (1960) An economic analysis of fertility. In Universities-National Bureau of Economic Research, Demographic and Economic Change in Developed Countries. Columbia University Press, New York, pp. 209231.Google Scholar
Bongaarts, J. (1978) A framework for analyzing the proximate determinants of fertility. Population and Development Review 4, 105132.Google Scholar
Bongaarts, J. (2005) The causes of stalling fertility transitions. Paper presented at the IUSSP International Population Conference, Tours, France.Google Scholar
Bongaarts, J. (2008) Fertility transitions in developing countries: progress or stagnation? Studies in Family Planning 39, 105110.Google Scholar
Bryant, J. (2007) Theories of fertility decline and the evidence from development indicators. Population and Development Review 33, 101127.Google Scholar
Castro Martin, T. (1995) Women's education and fertility: results from 26 Demographic and Health Surveys. Studies in Family Planning 26, 187202.Google Scholar
Chackiel, J. & Schkolnik, S. (1996) Latin America: overview of the fertility transition, 1950–1990. In Jose Guzman, J., Singh, S., Rodriguez, G., & Pantelides, E. (eds) The Fertility Transition in Latin America. Clarendon Press, Oxford, pp. 326.Google Scholar
De Herdt, T. (2004) Ménages cachés, mères célibataires et cibalabala: Déclin économique et évolution de la composition des ménages à Kinshasa. In Trefon, T. (ed) Ordre et désordre à Kinshasa: Réponses populaires à la faillite de l'État. Cahiers Africains, Tervuren and Editions L'Harmattan, Paris, pp. 155172.Google Scholar
Eloundou-Enyegue, P., Stokes, C. S. & Cornwell, G. (2000) Are there crisis-led fertility declines? Evidence from Central Cameroon. Population Research and Policy Review 19, 4772.Google Scholar
Fassassi, R., Vignikin, K. & Vimard, P. (2010) La régulation de la fécondité en Afrique: Transformations et différenciations au tournant du XXIe siècle. Academia Bruylant, Louvain-la-Neuve.Google Scholar
Garenne, M. (2008) Fertility Changes in Sub-Saharan Africa. DHS Comparative Reports No. 18. Macro International Inc., Calverton, MD, USA.Google Scholar
Garenne, M. & Joseph, V. (2002) The timing of the fertility transition in sub-Saharan Africa. World Development 30, 18351843.Google Scholar
Gurmu, E. & Mace, R. (2008) Fertility decline driven by poverty: the case of Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. Journal of Biosocial Science 40, 339358.Google Scholar
Heston, A.Summers, R. & Aten, B. (2011) Penn World Table Version 7.0. Center for International Comparisons of Production, Income and Prices, University of Pennsylvania.Google Scholar
Houyoux, J. & Kinavwuidi, N. (1986) Kinshasa, 1975. Bureau d'Etudes, d'Aménagement et d'Urbanisme, Kinshasa, ICHEC, Brussels. Originally published as Etude démographique de Kinshasa (Bureau d'Etudes, d'Aménagement et d'Urbanisme, Kinshasa, 1977).Google Scholar
Institut National de la Statistique (2011) Enquêtes par grappes à indicateurs multiples, MICS – 2010, Rapport final. Institut National de la Statistique, Kinshasa.Google Scholar
Kravdal, O. (2002) Education and fertility in sub-Saharan Africa: individual and community effects. Demography 39, 233250.Google Scholar
Lesthaeghe, R. J. (1989) Social organization, economic crisis, and the future of fertility control in Africa. In Lesthaeghe, R. J. (ed.) Reproduction and Social Organization in Sub-Saharan Africa. University of California Press, Berkeley and Los Angeles, pp. 475505.Google Scholar
Ministère du Plan and Macro International (2008) Enquête Démographique et de Santé, République Démocratique du Congo 2007. Ministère du Plan and Macro International, Calverton, MD, USA.Google Scholar
National Research Council (1993) Demographic Effects of Economic Reversals in Sub-Saharan Africa. National Academy Press, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Ngondo, A. P. (1996) Nucléarisation du ménage biologique et renforcement du ménage social à Kinshasa. Zaïre-Afrique 308 (October), 419444.Google Scholar
Romaniuk, A. (1967) La Fécondité des populations congolaises. Mouton, Paris.Google Scholar
Romaniuk, A. (1968) The demography of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. In Brass, W.et al.The Demography of Tropical Africa. Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ, pp. 241341.Google Scholar
Romaniuk, A. (2011) Persistence of high fertility in tropical Africa: the case of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Population and Development Review 37, 128.Google Scholar
Sala-Diakanda, M. (1980) Approche ethnique des phénomènes démographiques: Le Cas du Zaïre. Cabay Librairie Editeur S.A., Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium, for Département de Démographie, Université Catholique de Louvain.Google Scholar
Shapiro, D. (1996) Fertility decline in Kinshasa. Population Studies 50, 89103.Google Scholar
Shapiro, D. (2010) Ongoing fertility transition in Kinshasa. Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Population Association of America, 15–17th April, Dallas, TX.Google Scholar
Shapiro, D. (2012) Women's education and fertility transition in sub-Saharan Africa. Vienna Yearbook of Population Research 10, 930.Google Scholar
Shapiro, D. & Gebreselassie, T. (2008) Fertility transition in sub-Saharan Africa: falling and stalling. African Population Studies 23, 323.Google Scholar
Shapiro, D., Gough, M. & Pongi, R. (2011) Gender, education, and the labor market in Kinshasa. African Population Studies 25, 487508.Google Scholar
Shapiro, D., Kreider, A., Varner, C. & Sinha, M. (2013) Stalling of fertility transitions and socioeconomic change in the developing world: evidence from the Demographic and Health Surveys. In Tabutin, D. & Masquelier, B. (eds) Ralentissements, résistances et ruptures dans les transitions démographiques. Actes de la Chaire Quetelet 2010. Presse de l'Université de Louvain, Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium, pp. 4764.Google Scholar
Shapiro, D. & Tambashe, B. O. (2002) Fertility transition in urban and rural sub-Saharan Africa: preliminary evidence of a three-stage process. Journal of African Policy Studies 8, 103127.Google Scholar
Shapiro, D. & Tambashe, B. O. (2003) Kinshasa in Transition: Women's Education, Employment, and Fertility. University of Chicago Press, Chicago.Google Scholar
Sibanda, A., Woubalem, Z., Hogan, D. P. & Lindstrom, D. P. (2003) The proximate determinants of the decline to below-replacement fertility in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. Studies in Family Planning 34, 17.Google Scholar
Trefon, T. (2004) Introduction: la réinvention de l'ordre à Kinshasa. In Trefon, T. (ed.) Ordre et désordre à Kinshasa: Réponses populaires à la faillite de l'État. Cahiers Africains, Tervuren & Editions L'Harmattan, Paris, pp. 1332.Google Scholar
United Nations Population Division (2012) World Urbanization Prospects: The 2011 Revision. United Nations Population Division, New York. URL: http://esa.un.org/unpd/wup/unup/Google Scholar
United Nations Population Division (2013) World Population Prospects: The 2012 Revision. United Nations Population Division, New York. URL: http://esa.un.org/unpd/wpp/index.htmGoogle Scholar