Fertility Trend in Ghana

  • Samuel Gaisie University of Botswana

Abstract

The study traces the likely route of the movement of fertility through the demographic transition. The information is critical for construction of population projections as well as for monitoring and evaluating action programmes The original P/F ratio method and modified versions, one through the intermediary of relational Gompertz model, for analysing birth history data, are employed in assessing data quality as well as in determining fertility levels and trends. The derived estimates suggest that the level of fertility in Ghana fell from about seven children per woman in the 1960s and 1970s to 4.6 children per woman by the turn of the 20th century. The pace of the decline, slowed down considerably between the late1990s and the beginning of this century when the total fertility rate dropped from 4.8 to 4.6  The changing youth population, substantial increase in  the number of females aged 15-49 years, increasing  aging population and the huge discrepancy between  contraceptive use and the level of fertility are some of the crucial issues that call for policy options and research-based evidence for designing context specific development strategies and action programmes.

Author Biography

Samuel Gaisie, University of Botswana
Department of Demography
Published
2013-11-01
Section
Articles