FEEDBACK
Jump to content

Document Abstract
Published: 2012

Fertility and family well-being effects of an aggressive family planning policy in Peru in the 1990s

Did the reduction of fertility in Peru lead to improvements in household welfare?
View full report

In the mid-1990s, the Peruvian government initiated an aggressive family planning programme to address widespread poverty in the country, and female sterilisation was a publicly stated element of the programme. This paper tries to find out who was affected by the sterilisation policy, and what impact the policy had on fertility and household well-being.

The paper indicates that anecdotal evidence suggests that health workers were given large sterilisation quotas and reportedly used bribes, coercion, and even force to meet them.

Findings include:
  • it is evident that a large increase in sterilisations took place during the suspected policy window
  • it is clear that the sterilisation policy involved egregious human rights violations
  • the substantial decrease in fertility caused by the policy does not seem to be associated with substantial improvements in family well-being
  • there were small improvements in height for age and school enrollment for girls whose mothers were sterilised by the sterilisation policy

The document concludes the following:
  • the mere reduction of fertility is not necessarily associated with substantial improvements in welfare in the context of potentially coerced sterilisations
  • in general, when birth control is imposed, the benefits of making choices about fertility may not accrue to women and their households
  • future family planning policies should focus on improving the choices available to women and their families rather than imposing a single contraceptive alternative
View full report

Authors

T. Byker; I.A. Gutierrez

Amend this document

Help us keep up to date