Continuing Challenges
Programs have already made a substantial contribution to welfare
in developing countries. From 1960 to 1990, the number of young dependents
(under age 15) per 100 developing-country workers fell from 75 to 60. If, as
noted earlier, family planning programs have been responsible for about 40
percent of fertility decline (Bongaarts, forthcoming), they would be responsible
for two-thirds of this reduction (Figure 17). An essentially similar conclusion
can be drawn from overall dependency ratios, which include older
dependents.12 Family planning has already reduced the burdens on and
provided substantial opportunities for households and individuals in many
countries.
12The argument is based on population
projections over this period, separately for China and for all other developing
countries, that assume that fertility decline is only 60 percent of that
reported. Assumptions and methods follow World Bank (1997a).
But family planning programs still have much to accomplish. Each
worker must still provide for 10 to 15 percent more dependents than in
industrial countries, with all this implies in poorer health and obstacles to
development. These burdens are projected to decline, but such projections are
contingent on continued program success - on the family planning movement
remaining as strong and innovative into the next century as it has been in the
last decades of this century. If programs somehow disintegrate, the reduction in
young dependents will be only half what it might be by 2020 and only a fourth of
what it might be by 2050 (Figure 18 ). If somehow all fertility decline - due
not only to programs but also to socioeconomic advance - came to a halt, the
dependency burden would soon begin to rise.13
13This is shown in population projections
for China and for all other developing countries that assume, in one case, that
fertility decline will be only 60 percent of the standard projection and, in
another case, that fertility will remain constant. Assumptions and methods
follow World Bank (1997a).

Figure 17 - Effect of Family
Planning Programs on the Dependency Burden in Developing Countries,
1960-2000
SOURCE: United Nations (1996) and projections using
the World Bank (1997a) model.
The technical challenges for family planning programs have not
all been solved. If each program has to capitalize on existing demand to reduce
fertility - essential for success, as was argued earlier - each needs the skills
to investigate this demand among individuals and households and to develop and
implement indigenous responses. Programs also increasingly recognize the need to
craft new approaches to reach young adults, say between the ages of 15 and 24.
This group, a slightly larger proportion of the population in the 1980s and
1990s (Figure 19), will reach 900 million by the turn of the century and will
have considerable influence on the future trajectory of population growth.

Figure 18 - Projected Trends in
Dependency in Developing Countries Under Different Assumptions, 1990-2050
Source: Projections using the World Bank (1997a)
model

Figure 19 - Trends in Age
Distribution in Developing Countries, 1950-2050
SOURCE: United Nations (1996) and projections using
the World Bank (1997a) model.
As fertility declines, it becomes concentrated among young
adults. As total fertility fell from 7.3 to 6.9 children per woman in Uganda
from the mid-1980s to the early 1990s the proportion of all births that were to
women 15-24 rose from 46 to 52 percent. In India - where total fertility is much
lower, at 3.4 children and where half of all young women are married before age
18 - this proportion has reached 58 percent.14 Many pregnancies at
these ages are not intended and would be postponed if possible, even among
married women. The unmet need for contraception is increasing among young adults
relative to its levels among older women. Figure 20 gives the ratios of unmet
need in each age group to overall unmet need, showing how these ratios are
rising for young adults as overall contraceptive prevalence increases, even as
they fall for older women.15
14Estimated from Uganda Demographic and
Health Surveys (1988-1989 and 1995) and the India National Family Health Survey
(1992-1993). An additional factor that exacerbates but does not entirely explain
the Indian case has been the long failure to provide contraceptive methods
useful for spacing births.
15The quadratic equations defining these curves were
estimated across 27 countries with data (Westoff and Bankole, 1995, pp. 6, 9)
that cover the range of contraceptive prevalence estimates in this graph.
R2 for the equation for age group 15-19 was 0.68 and for age
group 20-24, 0.72, both significant.

Figure 20 - Ratio of Unmet Need in
Each Age Group to Overall Unmet Need by Level of Contraceptive Prevalence
SOURCE: Quadratic regressions estimated from data
for 27 countries in Westoff and Bankole (1995, pp. 6, 9).
Much, though not all, of the need for contraception among young
adults is for delaying or spacing births. With the realization that delaying
births can help reduce fertility faster and further (Bongaarts 1994), programs
face new challenges and a need to refurbish their goals and promotional
approaches.16 Programs also face additional challenges in improving
service quality; dealing with sexually transmitted diseases, including HIV/AIDS;
and ensuring broader attention to women's reproductive health needs, as the
world community called for at the Cairo conference. Assisting countries to meet
such challenges will be difficult without American leadership and the continued
engagement of American expertise.
16Any fertility reduction, whether or not
due to birth delay, means that future population momentum will be less, or at
least will not grow as much as it otherwise would.
Funds to assist developing-country family planning programs were
first approved by the U.S. Congress three decades ago. The United States still
provides almost half of all donor funding,17 but other countries have
increasingly contributed: Europe now provides 40 percent of the total, and
Japan, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand all add their shares. With the task of
reducing fertility and dependency around the world only half completed, it
remains to be seen whether the United States and its allies will stay the course
and finish the job.
17The reference is to "primary" donor
funding in 1995, which includes funds passed through multilateral agencies and
international nongovernmental organizations (UNFPA,
1997a).