Population Controllers have a new strategy—those who manipulate women’s desires, control their fertility
by Anne Roback Morse
The Kenyan government recently outlined a new brand of
coercive population control. Unlike China’s policy which uses coercion
to control the number of births, Kenya is trying to control population
earlier in the reproductive process by changing women’s desires to have
children.
In the early 1980’s, the average woman in Kenya had 8
children. In the last 30 years, fertility rates fell by 44% to 4.5
children, but this fall has not been enough for the Kenyan National
Council for Population and Development (NCPD) or the United Nations
Population Fund (UNFPA) which work closely together. In two governmental
papers, the Kenyan government, in conjunction with the UNFPA, outlined a
plan to reduce fertility by an additional 42% to 2.6 children per woman
by the year 2030.
Accepted demographic research indicates that fertility
falls as a country develops. This decline in fertility is part of
demographic transition theory; fertility drops for a myriad of reasons,
including urbanization, falling child mortality, and increased
longevity. For instance, as child mortality falls, women bear fewer
children—they know they need to have fewer live births to attain their
fertility goals. Kenya’s fertility decline over the past 30 years is a
natural result of these advancements. As Kenya continues to develop, its
fertility rate will continue to decline.
Even though the idea that moderate fertility hinders
development contradicts demographic transition theory, the Kenyan
government has embraced this falsehood at the urging of the UNFPA. This
ideological error has consequently created distorted policy
implementations. In two policy papers, Kenyan government ministries
laid out their utilitarian plan: despite individual wishes, fertility
must fall for the common good. Their plan to curb fertility—a massive
public education campaign—goes against the real desires of Kenyan women
to have multiple children.
Experts agree that fertility remains high in Kenya, not
because women don’t know how to lower their fertility, but because they
do not want to. Knowledge of modern contraceptive methods in Kenya is
“universal” at 97%. A professor of demography and sociology at
Princeton, Charles Westoff, recently stated that “about half the women
categorised as having an 'unmet need' [in Kenya] have no intention of
using contraceptives even if they were made freely available,” and the
most recent Demographic and Health Survey in Kenya found that, amongst
women who don’t use contraception, fewer than 2% are deterred because of
cost or access.
The policy papers repeatedly acknowledge that Kenyan fertility remains high because desired fertility is high:
- “The demand for children is still high and is
unlikely to change unless substantial changes in desired family sizes
are achieved among the poor in general….Thus the challenge is how to
reduce further the continued high demand for children.” (Kenyan
Population Situation Analysis)
- “The achievement of this policy option (lowering
fertility) is complicated by differences between individual fertility
preferences and desirable fertility levels in these countries.” (Kenyan
Population Situation Analysis)
The Kenyan government has decided that since Kenyan women
are so misguided as to actually want 4 or 5 children, the government
will have to change their reproductive desires:
- “Support programmes that will intensify nationwide
advocacy and public awareness campaigns on implications of rapidly
growing population on individual family welfare and national
socio-economic development. This should create the required small family
norms; desire for high quality of life as opposed to large numbers.”
(Sessional Paper on Population Policy for National Development)
- Reduce mean ideal number of children for men from 4.3
in 2009 to 3 by 2030 and from women from 4.0 to 2.8 by 2030.”(Sessional
Paper on Population Policy for National Development)
- “Formulate a scheme that recognises small family sizes.” (Sessional Paper on Population Policy for National Development)
The logic of the Kenyan government has become completely
distorted; low fertility is no longer a neutral byproduct of
development, but the new end goal. The Kenyan ministries seems to extol
education and health as mere tools towards fertility reduction:
- “Investing in both education and health would
contribute to the attainment of more favourable demographic indicators,
such as lower fertility... lower ideal family sizes.” (Kenyan Population
Situation Analysis)
- “Higher education leads to lower fertility rates,
increased productivity and improved competitiveness.” (Sessional Paper
on Population Policy for National Development)
- “Strengthen literacy
programmes for improved uptake of family planning services.” (Sessional
Paper on Population Policy for National Development)
Such a mentality violates not only natural sensibilities,
but also U.S. federal funding laws. The U.S. is one of the UNFPA’s
largest donors, having given over $30 million in 2012. The United
States’ Tiahrt Amendment prohibits the U.S. from funding any U.S.,
foreign, or international NGO that participates in coercive family
planning programs. The amendment includes targets or quotas for births
amongst prohibited policies, and programs such as Kenya’s are therefore
disqualified from funding. The Kenyan government has not tried to
disguise that they have targets for fertility, the number of
contraceptive users, the number of new contraceptive “acceptors,” or for
desired family size (see image at top of article).
Now, all that remains is for the U.S. to decide whether or
not they value population control over reproductive freedom, and for
Kenya to decide whether or not they want to continue down this path of
coercion in a misguided attempt to develop their country.
The
pro-life Population Research Institute is dedicated to ending human rights
abuses committed in the name of "family planning," and to ending
counter-productive social and economic paradigms premised on the myth of
"overpopulation." Find us at pop.org.
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