DEMOGRAPHIC RESEARCH
VOLUME 48, ARTICLE 34, PAGES 945956
PUBLISHED 27 JUNE 2023
https://www.demographic-research.org/Volumes/Vol48/34/
DOI: 10.4054/DemRes.2023.48.34
Descriptive Finding
Near-universal marriage, early childbearing,
and low fertility: India’s alternative fertility
transition
Narae Park
Sangita Vyas
Kathleen Broussard
Dean Spears
© 2023 Park, Vyas, Broussard & Spears.
This open-access work is published under the terms of the Creative Commons
Attribution 3.0 Germany (CC BY 3.0 DE), which permits use, reproduction,
and distribution in any medium, provided the original author(s) and source
are given credit.
See https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/de/legalcode.
Contents
1 Background 946
2 Data and methods 947
3 Results 948
4 Discussion 953
5 Acknowledgements 954
References 955
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Descriptive Finding
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Near-universal marriage, early childbearing, and low fertility:
India’s alternative fertility transition
Narae Park
1
Sangita Vyas
2
Kathleen Broussard
3
Dean Spears
4
Abstract
OBJECTIVE
To compare fertility in India to both low-to-middle-income and high-income countries
(LMICs and HICs) and describe the patterns that have accompanied India’s transition to
low fertility.
METHODS
We use data from the Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS), the United Nations (UN),
and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) to observe
factors associated with fertility decline in 36 Indian states and 76 countries.
RESULTS
Although fertility in India has declined to levels similar to HICs, women’s entry into
marriage and initiation of childbearing are more in line with patterns found in LMICs.
The vast majority of women in India (97%) are married by age 30, and their average age
at first birth is only 21.3 years old. In spite of these patterns, average fertility has declined
in India as a result of earlier termination of childbearing. Among more recent cohorts,
fewer women progressed to higher-order births and about half of women obtained a
sterilization by age 35.
1
Population Research Center and Population Wellbeing Initiative at the University of Texas at Austin, USA.
2
Hunter College and CUNY Institute for Demographic Research at the City University of New York,
Population Wellbeing Initiative at the University of Texas at Austin, USA, and r.i.c.e..
3
Department of Sociology at the University of South Carolina, Population Wellbeing Initiative at the University
of Texas at Austin, USA. Email: [email protected].
4
Department of Economics, Population Research Center and Population Wellbeing Initiative at the University
of Texas at Austin, USA, r.i.c.e., and IZA, Bonn, Germany. Email: [email protected].
Park et al.: Near-universal marriage, early childbearing, and low fertility: India’s alternative fertility transition
946 https://www.demographic-research.org
CONCLUSIONS
India has reached low fertility by mechanisms outside the traditional indicators of fertility
decline. In contrast to countries that have achieved low fertility through delayed age at
first birth, women in India have continued to enter unions and bear children early,
lowered their age at last birth, and increasingly ended their fertility via sterilization
following the birth of two children.
CONTRIBUTION
Evidence from India reveals an alternative pathway to low fertility, highlighting the
limitations of traditional socioeconomic indicators for explaining fertility decline.
1. Background
Demographers have long investigated the relationship between development and fertility,
broadly attributing fertility decline to material and ideational change in society
(Bongaarts and Watkins 1996; Bryant 2007; Cleland and Wilson 1987; Galloway,
Hammel, and Lee 1994; Potter, Schmertman, and Cavenaghi 2022; Watkins 1987). In
high-income countries (HICs), fertility decline was long correlated with increases in
women’s participation in the labor force and higher education (Devaney 1983; Adserà
2004; Sobotka, Beaujuoan, and Van Bavel 2017). As women devoted a greater proportion
of their early childbearing years to these pursuits, rates of childlessness and the average
age at first birth both increased, contributing to fertility postponement and decline
(Abbasi-Shavazi, McDonald, and Hosseini-Chavoshi 2009; Adserà 2004; Devaney 1983;
Frejka and Sardon 2006; Yoo 2014).
India will soon surpass China as the most populous country in the world (UN DESA
2022), making it an important place to understand the causes and consequences of fertility
decline. Despite continued population growth, fertility has long been declining in the
country, with states in the South generally leading the transition (Visaria and Visaria
1994; Guilmoto and Rajan 2005). India recently joined over 80 countries with sub-
replacement fertility (UN DESA 2020), reaching a total fertility rate (TFR) of just 2.0
births per woman (India DHS 20192021). Despite this convergence to sub-replacement
fertility, India’s journey through demographic transition has occurred with minimal
changes in women’s labor force participation (Gietel-Basten, Spears, and Visaria 2021),
marriage dynamics (Dommaraju 2013), and family change (Ram 2012), in notable
contrast to historical patterns observed in HICs.
In this article, we document additional features of India’s transition to low fertility
that highlight its experience compared to other countries. In the first part of our analysis,
we show that TFR in India is more closely aligned with HICs at two children per woman,
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yet the vast majority of women in India get married and start childbearing early, patterns
that are more similar to LMICs. The second part of our analysis documents patterns
associated with fertility decline in India. In contrast to the processes that have
accompanied sub-replacement fertility in HICs, India’s transition to low fertility across
cohorts of women has occurred along with only small changes in the proportion of
women who marry, age at first marriage, and age at first birth. The decline in fertility
across cohorts is, however, associated with substantial reductions in the age at last birth.
Relative to older cohorts, women in more recent cohorts have substantially shortened
their childbearing careers through the use of female sterilization.
India is not the only country to have reached sub-replacement fertility through
pathways that differ from those experienced in Western countries (Lesthaeghe 2014). For
example, the close link between cohabitation and fertility postponement observed in
Western countries was not observed in East Asia and Latin America (ibid.). India’s
experience of transition to low fertility with little change in entry into marriage or
initiation of childbearing provides further evidence for the existence of alternative
pathways to fertility transition.
2. Data and methods
For our cross-country analyses, we compare India to 76 countries. To compare marriage
rates, we use data from the UN World Fertility and Marriage Data. To compare age at
first birth, we use Demographic and Health Survey (DHS) data for 44 LMICs and
Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) data for 32 primarily
HICs. In these analyses, data on India are from India’s 20192021 DHS. For all countries,
data from the most recent survey year is used.
For our within-country analyses, we use data from India’s 19921993, 19981999,
20052006, 20152016, and 20192021 DHS. Combining data from the five rounds
allows us to examine changes across cohorts and differences between regions in fertility,
ideal fertility, the timing of marriage and initiation of childbearing, and contraceptive use.
For fertility, we study parity at age 30, an age at which the vast majority of women
in India have ended their childbearing careers. Studying parity at older ages would
substantially limit the sample; we note, however, that when we do examine parity at older
ages our findings are similar. For ideal fertility, the DHS asks the respondent how many
children she would choose to have in her lifetime. To compare entry into marriage and
initiation of childbearing we focus on several factors, including the proportion of women
cohabitating by age 30, age at first cohabitation, age at first birth, and age at last birth.
Finally, we examine patterns in contraceptive use, and in particular the use and timing of
female sterilization by age and parity.
Park et al.: Near-universal marriage, early childbearing, and low fertility: India’s alternative fertility transition
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The within-country analyses examine changes across birth cohorts of women in
India, and also explore differences across regions. In the analyses that follow we compare
four northern states, Bihar, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, and Uttar Pradesh, which have
relatively high fertility, to four southern states, Andhra Pradesh, Kerala, Karnataka, and
Tamil Nadu, which have relatively low fertility.
3. Results
In Figures 1 and 2 we document India’s low-fertility exceptionalism by comparing Indian
states to HICs and other LMICs regarding total fertility, the proportion of women aged
3034 ever-married, and average age at first birth. Occupying the space between HICs
and LMICs, TFR in India is more closely aligned with HICs at two children per woman,
yet the vast majority of women in India get married and start childbearing early, patterns
that are more similar to LMICs. In no other country with TFR less than or equal to 2.0 is
the proportion of ever-married women as high as in India. Similarly, only one other
country has a similarly low TFR and average age at first birth as India. Although there is
heterogeneity across Indian states, TFR is below 2.0 in 30 of 36 states, and in all except
one, average age at first birth is below 25. These figures demonstrate India’s position as
an outlier regarding its low fertility, despite the fact that most women get married and
begin childbearing at young ages.
How has the TFR in India declined despite the fact that women still initiate
childbearing relatively early by international standards? The remainder of our analysis
examines patterns within India and trends across cohorts. We compare four northern
states to four southern states, which have historically had relatively high and low fertility,
respectively. Figure 3 shows parity at age 30 and ideal fertility across 5-year cohorts of
women born between 1940 and 2009, for India as a whole and across regions. Women
born in cohorts beginning in 1990 had not reached age 30 by the time they were surveyed.
As in the previous figure, there is substantial heterogeneity across Indian states, with
southern states having substantially lower fertility than northern states. However, fertility
is declining in all states.
Ideal fertility is also declining in India. Like the fertility differences across regions,
ideal fertility is lower in southern states. However, among the youngest cohorts, ideal
fertility has reached levels below 2.0 in both regions. Among women born in 2000 or
later, about 9% stated an ideal of zero, 10% stated an ideal of one, and 72% stated an
ideal of two. This demonstrates a low fertility norm that is becoming stronger across
cohorts and does not provide any evidence that India’s fertility decline will halt at
replacement rate.
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Figure 1: India has low fertility despite a high proportion of married women
Note: The 36 Indian states are represented by dark gray triangles. Non-OECD countries are represented by light gray circles. OECD
countries are labeled as medium gray rectangles. Source: UN World Fertility and Marriage for all countries but India and DHS for Indian
states.
Park et al.: Near-universal marriage, early childbearing, and low fertility: India’s alternative fertility transition
950 https://www.demographic-research.org
Figure 2: India has low fertility despite a low average age at first birth
Note: The 36 Indian states are represented by dark gray triangles. Non-OECD countries are represented by light gray circles. OECD
countries are labeled as medium gray rectangles. Source: OECD Family Database for OECD countries and DHS for non-OECD
countries and India.
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Figure 3: Declining age 30 parity and ideal fertility across cohorts in India
Note: Black lines are estimates of parity at age 30 and ideal number of children for India as a whole. The gray lines are estimates for
the northern and southern states, respectively, and are labeled. Source: NFHS 15.
Is declining fertility associated with differences in family formation and the timing
of childbearing? Figure 4 responds to this question by showing, by cohort, the proportion
of women that are married by age 30 (on the right axis), as well as age at first cohabitation,
first birth, and last birth, for India as a whole and across regions. While India has
experienced rapid fertility decline, there have been only slow changes in family formation
and the initiation of childbearing. Across cohorts, in both the northern and southern states,
the vast majority of women have married and have married young. The average age at
first cohabitation was below age 20 even in the youngest cohort of women. Moreover,
despite substantially lower fertility in southern states compared to northern states, women
in both regions started their childbearing careers before age 22, on average. Lower
fertility in India’s southern states is not substantially explained by postponement of
childbearing.
Park et al.: Near-universal marriage, early childbearing, and low fertility: India’s alternative fertility transition
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Figure 4: Small increase in age at first birth and large declines in age at last
birth across cohorts in India
Note: Black lines are estimates for India as a whole. Gray lines are estimates for northern and southern states, respectively. The lines
for north and south for age at first birth and married by age 30 are not separately labeled because they are so similar to each other.
Source: NFHS 15.
Regional and cohort differences are, however, accompanied by differences in the
timing of last birth. Across cohorts in India the average age at last birth has declined
substantially, from 32.1 to 25.7. Although women across cohorts and regions initiated
childbearing at similar ages, more recent cohorts and women in southern states ended
their childbearing careers at younger ages.
How have women in India ended their childbearing careers at younger ages? The
country once again stands out as a global outlier in its reliance on sterilization, a
procedure obtained by 38% of married women ages 1549. The next most common form
of contraception, condoms, is only used by 9% of married women.
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Figure 5: Female sterilization increasingly common among younger cohorts in
India
Note: The figure shows the fraction of women who obtained a sterilization, by age. Solid lines show estimates for the 19401944
cohort. The dashed lines show estimates for the 1980–1984 cohort. For each cohort, the gray lines are estimates for the southern and
northern states. Source: NFHS 15.
Figure 5 shows that about half of Indian women in the 19801984 cohort obtained
a sterilization by age 35, up from about one-fifth in the 19401944 cohort. In the southern
states about 70% of the younger cohort ended their fertility via sterilization by this age.
In results not shown, sterilization after the birth of a second or higher order child has
become increasingly common.
4. Discussion
In this article, we join others who have examined global outliers in the fertility transition
in order to illuminate alternate pathways to fertility decline (Bryant 2007; Bongaarts
2017; Bongaarts and Casterline 2013). India’s fertility transition is important because
Park et al.: Near-universal marriage, early childbearing, and low fertility: India’s alternative fertility transition
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India represents a large fraction of the global population, and because of what it can teach
demographers about the conditions for low fertility more generally. Although there is
significant heterogeneity across Indian states, fertility is declining nationwide and has
reached sub-replacement levels through mechanisms that differ from both LMICs and
HICs in several key ways. Women in India continue to marry and start having children
at young ages. Fertility has declined across cohorts as women end their childbearing
careers at younger ages. Terminating childbearing via sterilization is a growing trend,
with about half of women among younger cohorts doing so by age 35.
The distinctive pattern of fertility decline that has emerged in India, absent any
dramatic changes in the timing of family formation or female labor force participation,
suggests that this decline is motivated by factors that differ from those in other countries.
Unfortunately, our analysis is subject to limitations that preclude us from separating the
external influence of the state versus individual preferences for fewer children. In India,
the dearth of opportunities for young women in higher education and the labor force
means that these years are instead largely devoted to family formation and childbearing.
Research on India and other countries suggests that couples may be motivated to limit
their fertility in order to make greater investments in each individual child (Bryant 2007;
Visaria 2022).
Alternatively, India has a documented history of coercive and forced sterilization
(Gupte 2017; Nandagiri 2022), which could also be a driver of fertility decline.
Unfortunately, we are unable to account for women’s motivations for and attitudes
towards sterilization. Given India’s fraught history and the increasing rate of female
sterilization, more research is needed on women’s desire for sterilization, as well as
alternate methods of contraception.
Now the most populous country in the world, India has attained sub-replacement
fertility through pathways that differ from HICs. This suggests that there is not simply
one pathway to demographic transition. Although the link between women’s
socioeconomic behaviors and fertility is well-documented, fertility decline may still
occur in the absence of a delay in family formation, high female labor force involvement,
or access to a wide range of contraceptive methods.
5. Acknowledgements
This research received support from the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of
Child Health and Human Development (grant K01HD098313 and by P2CHD042849)
and from the Musk Foundation, awarded to the Population Research Center at The
University of Texas at Austin; the content is solely the responsibility of the authors and
does not necessarily represent the official views of the funders.
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