Publications
- Gender, Intrahousehold Decisionmaking, and the Demand for Children
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- by Field, Erica; Ashraf, Nava; Lee, Jean N.
- We present evidence from a field experiment in Lusaka, Zambia that male involvement in the
decision to seek out family planning services leads to substantial reductions in utilization. This
phenomenon appears to be driven by average differences by gender in the demand for children
rather than by a general distrust of or lack of information about family planning technologies
among men. Study participants were offered a voucher that granted access to an appointment
with a family planning nurse without a wait in line. Demand for family planning services is high,
as evidenced by the 41 percent overall rate at which these vouchers were redeemed. Women
were randomly assigned to receive the voucher either by themselves in private, or together with
their husbands. Takeup among women assigned to receive the vouchers with their husbands was
9 percentage points (18 percent) lower than among women randomly assigned to receive the
vouchers alone. We find evidence that this reduction in takeup was larger if husbands wanted
more children than their wives, and stronger evidence that this reduction was larger among
young couples than among older couples with completed fertility. There is no evidence that
assignment to couples treatment reduces voucher use for women whose husbands want no more
children, and evidence for a 12 percentage point reduction in use in the subsample of women
whose husbands do want more children. Taken together, these results suggest that the unitary
and collective bargaining models do not sufficiently richly describe the bargaining process over
fertility within the household. Furthermore, policies or technologies that shift relative control
of contraceptive methods from men to women may significantly increase contraceptive use and
reduce average fertility in some contexts.
- Publication Type: WCFIA Working Paper
- Published Date: August 21, 2007
- Field of Interest: Global Issues
- Field, Erica, Nava Ashraf, and Jean N. Lee. "Gender, Intrahousehold Decisionmaking, and the Demand for Children." Working Paper 2008-0028, Weatherhead Center for International Affairs, Harvard University, August 21, 2007.