Type | Journal Article - Journal of Human Resources |
Title | The supply of birth control methods, education, and fertility evidence from Romania |
Author(s) | |
Volume | 45 |
Issue | 4 |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2010 |
Page numbers | 971-997 |
URL | http://www.columbia.edu/~cp2124/papers/fertility_latest2.pdf |
Abstract | This paper investigates the effect of the supply of birth control methods on fertility behavior by exploring the effects of Romaniaís 23-year period of continued pronatalist policies. Between 1957 and 1966 Romania had a very liberal abortion policy, and abortion was the main method of contraception. In 1966, the Romanian government abruptly made abortion and family planning illegal. This policy was sustained until December 1989 with only minor modifications. The implementation and repeal of the restrictive regime provide a useful and plausibly exogenous source of variation in the cost of birth control methods that is arguably orthogonal to the demand for children. Women who spent most of their reproductive years under the restrictive regime experienced large increases in fertility (about 0.5 children or a 25% increase). Less educated women had bigger increases in fertility after policy implementation and larger fertility decreases following the lifting of restrictions in 1989, when fertility differentials between educational groups decreased by almost fifty percent. These findings strongly suggest that access to abortion and birth control are quantitatively significant determinants of fertility levels, particularly for less educated women. |
» | Moldova - Reproductive Health Survey 1997 |
» | Romania - Recensamântul Populatiei si Locuintelor 1992 |