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Son preference in Bangladesh: an emerging barrier to fertility regulation
Authors:R Amin  A G Mariam
Abstract:This study investigates the effect of son preference on contraceptive use and desire for additional children using national level survey data from Bangladesh for the years 1969 and 1979. National probability samples of ever married women between the ages of 10 and 50 were selected and stratified by urban-rural residence. Specifically, the study focuses on contraceptive use and desire for additional children and separates the effect of sex preference from that of high parity on fertility control. Son preference has a negative effect on contraceptive use and a positive effect on the desire for additional children regardless of socioeconomic and demographic characteristics. This advese effect of son preference on fertility regulation seemed to have persisted over the years. Relevent socioeconomic conditions in Bangladesh are described. In 1979, the effect of sex composition on contraceptive use or desire for additional children varied by parity. The negative effect of fewer living sons on contraceptive use and its positive effect on desire for additional children was higher in parities between 2 and 4 than in other parities. The effect of sex composition was stronger on desire for additional children than on contraceptive usage. In 1969, however, there was no consistent positive relationship between sex composition and contraceptive use. The relationship between sex composition and desire for more children was positive. Among women of parities 2 to 4, an excess of daughters continued to have a major positive effect on desire for additional children, and a negative effect on contraceptive use, after controlling for other sociodemographic variables. For parities 1 and 5 or above, the effect was either weak or inconsistent.
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