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Does female schooling reduce fertility? Evidence from Nigeria
Authors: Una Okonkwo Osili, and Bridget Terry Long
Source: Journal of Development Economics, 87(1): 57-75; DOI: 10.1016/j.jdeveco.2007.10.003
Topic(s): Education
Fertility
Country: Africa
  Nigeria
Published: AUG 2008
Abstract: The literature generally points to a negative relationship between female education and fertility. Citing this pattern, policymakers have advocated educating girls and young women as a means to reduce population growth and foster sustained economic and social welfare in developing countries. This paper tests whether the relationship between fertility and education is indeed causal by investigating the introduction of universal primary education in Nigeria. Exploiting differences in program exposure by region and age, the paper presents reduced form and instrumental variables estimates of the impact of female education on fertility. The analysis suggests that increasing female education by one year reduces early fertility by 0.26 births.