The fertility transition in South Africa: A retrospective panel data analysis
Stellenbosch Working Paper Series No. WP03/2012 (revised, version: 2)Publication date: 2012
Author(s):
[protected email address] (Department of Economics, University of Stellenbosch)
[protected email address] (Department of Economics, University of Stellenbosch)
Since 1960 South Africa has seen a steep fall in fertility levels and currently the total fertility rate is the lowest on the African continent. Given the high prevailing levels of fertility in African countries, a better understanding of the factors behind the fertility transition can be valuable not only for South Africa, but also more widely for other African countries. This paper uses the National Income Dynamics Study data to construct a retrospective panel to investigate reasons for the decline in fertility in South Africa since the 1960s. The analysis attributes a large share of the observed fertility decline across birth cohorts to improving education levels and the lower prevalence of marriage. However, a considerable segment of the transition is ascribed to the unobservables. This may include HIV/AIDS, the increased use of contraceptives and changes in intra-household relationships and the social role of women.
JEL Classification:J13, J12
Keywords:South Africa, fertility, education, marriage, social norms
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Upcoming Seminars
Monday 21 July 202512:00-13:00
Izak Odendaal: Old Mutual Wealth Chief Investment Strategist
Topic: "Diverging fiscal policies and what it means for markets"
12:00-13:00
Dr Neil Rankin: Ceo Of Predictive Insights & Stellenbosch University
Topic: "TBC"
12:00-13:00
Prof Willem Boshoff: Stellenbosch University
Topic: "Two competing approaches in South African competition policy: merger control and anti-cartel enforcement over the past 30 years"
BER Weekly
11 Jul 2025 Global trade risks resurface as SA faces new US tariffsThe US began issuing letters this week to announce new reciprocal tariffs, with South Africa among the first recipients. While President Donald Trump extended the implementation date to August 1, he warned that this would be the final delay. It was a quiet week on the data front, though South Africa’s stronger-than-expected factory output stood out...
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