The Effect of Family Planning Programs
National programs were established beginning in the 1950s and
multiplied most rapidly from the mid-1960s to the late 1970s when on average
five new programs were established each year. In a number of instances, national
programs expanded the work done by earlier, pioneering private programs, such as
those supported by the International Planned Parenthood Federation. National
programs naturally required government sanction and often also enjoyed
substantial support and technical assistance in many phases of their operation
from international donors.
Growth in contraceptive use after programs were established is
illustrated in Figure 12, showing a range of experience and some notable spurts
in contraceptive use that led to declines in fertility. These examples could be
multiplied: Increases in contraceptive prevalence (the proportion of married
women of reproductive age using contraception) and consequent fertility declines
have occurred in every region of the developing world, from Peru to Mongolia,
and from Iran to South Africa. But as Figure 12 illustrates, simply starting a
program does not guarantee immediate increased contraceptive use. Contraceptive
use did rise quickly in South Korea, where prevalence grew close to 3 percentage
points a year - sufficient to reach low, replacement fertility within 25 years,
essentially in a generation. But, in contrast, growth in contraceptive
prevalence began late and proceeded haltingly in Ghana, where the increase was
only 0.7 points a year. Even in such cases as South Korea, the credit that
programs can fairly claim for fertility reduction has been a topic of some
debate. Perhaps, some have argued, economic growth in Korea was so fast that
fertility would have declined even in the absence of a program. Indeed, analysis
suggests that programs cannot claim all the credit for fertility decline, but
they can clearly claim some credit.

Figure 12 - Starting Date for
Family Planning Program and Contraceptive Prevalence, Selected Countries
SOURCE: Based on World Bank
(1993a).
aDates indicate year of program start.
Field experiments usually indicate that well-done family
planning programs are welcomed and make a difference. Researchers have looked at
various elements of programs - the use of home visits, field-worker incentives,
consistent supervision of field workers, pill prescription practices, postpartum
education, etc. - to confirm a small but significant program effect on
contraceptive acceptance or continuation (Bauman, 1994). Focusing on specific
features of small-area programs, experiments can clearly demonstrate the
contribution of program activities and exclude other explanations for changes in
contraceptive use and fertility, in the process illustrating useful options for
programs. However, such experiments do not address whether programs can have
broader, nationwide effects.
This effect must be assessed against that of socioeconomic
development. Improved standards of living should make contraceptives more
affordable, as well as convincing many couples to opt for smaller families. Do
programs then merely substitute for private provision of contraceptives - are
they a natural but superfluous government response to consumer demand and
consequent public pressure? Or do programs, through their promotional activities
and the services they provide (much more promptly than market mechanisms would),
play a leading role in reducing fertility?
Answering such questions and determining the historical
contribution of large national programs is difficult. Comparisons are necessary
across countries with different types of programs or with no programs. Analysts
have generally relied on a reputational measure of "program effort," produced by
rating 90 or so national programs with regard to the access they provide to
contraceptive methods, their management effectiveness, their efforts at
informing and educating people, and a number of other such dimensions, 30 in
all. Analysis of program effort scores confirms that programs have been more
active in more advanced developing countries. Socioeconomic development allows
programs to operate more efficiently and, in leading to lower fertility
preferences, to be more effective at providing contraceptive services. But
relatively high levels of development, although helpful, do not appear to be
essential. Bangladesh, one of the world's 20 poorest countries, has a program
rated among the 10 best in the developing world and has seen a substantial
decline in fertility over the last decade.
Multivariate statistical analysis suggests, in fact, that family
planning programs do contribute independently to reduced fertility, even when
the effects of socioeconomic development are accounted for. Cross-sectional
regressions indicate that effective programs have a smaller effect than such
factors as rising levels of female education but still reduce fertility - net of
such other factors - by perhaps one-and-a-half births per woman. Skeptics put
the reduction at only one birth instead but do not deny it exists (Pritchett,
1994a, 1994b). The reduction is in the region of 40 percent of the fertility
decline in developing countries from the 1960s to the end of the 1980s
(Bongaarts, forthcoming).
Cross-national statistical analysis, like experimental work,
therefore indicates that family planning programs contribute to contraceptive
use and lower fertility. But both types of studies agree that the contribution
is contingent. Programs are not uniformly successful; their effects are
influenced by the social context (level of development, cultural factors,
political support) and depend on program performance (on the quality of program
effort, the design of interventions, the adequacy of supervision of service
providers, etc.). A brief overview of these factors affecting program
effectiveness helps clarify when and why programs
work.