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Full Citation

Title: Fertility transition powered by women’s access to electricity and modern cooking fuels

Citation Type: Journal Article

Publication Year: 2021

ISSN: 2398-9629

DOI: 10.1038/s41893-021-00830-3

Abstract: Access to electricity and modern cooking fuels, especially for women, leads to time savings in the home, improved health and better access to information. These factors increase women’s well-being and enhance their ability to make reproductive choices, which is empirically expressed by falling birth rates. This study provides an international analysis of the relationship between access to modern energy and fertility, based on panel data synthesized from 155 Demographic and Health Surveys over 26 years. Controlling for other determinants, we find that access to electricity and modern cooking fuels, along with education, negatively affects fertility. Energy and education effects are complementary and strongest in regions with initially high fertility rates. Expanded access to modern energy and education would accelerate the demographic transition. Therefore, the energy demand and carbon emissions needed to achieve the Sustainable Development Goal of energy access while ensuring gender equality and climate action would be lower in the long term than currently assumed. The fertility transition, expressed through falling birth rates and increased well-being for women and children, is a function of many social and economic changes. This paper examines the role of access to electricity and modern cooking fuels on fertility rates, suggesting that cleaner energy and ending energy poverty contribute to gender equality and the achievement of other Sustainable Development Goals.

Url: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41893-021-00830-3

User Submitted?: No

Authors: Belmin, Camille; Hoffmann, Roman; Pichler, Peter Paul; Weisz, Helga

Periodical (Full): Nature Sustainability

Issue: 3

Volume: 5

Pages: 245-253

Data Collections: IPUMS Global Health - DHS

Topics: Fertility and Mortality, Gender, Reproductive and Sexual Health

Countries:

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