Volume 37 - Article 16 | Pages 493–526
Different places, different stories: A study of the spatial heterogeneity of county-level fertility in China
By Donghui Wang, Guangqing Chi
Abstract
Background: China has been characterized by persistently low fertility rates since the 1990s. Existing literature has examined the relationship between fertility levels and social, economic, and policy-related determinants. However, the possible spatial variation in these relationships has not been investigated.
Objective: The purpose of this study is to examine the potential spatially varying relationships between county-level fertility rates and policy and socioeconomic factors in China.
Methods: Using geocoded 2010 county-level census data, this study adopts the geographically weighted regression (GWR) method to identify place-specific relationships between county-level total fertility rate (TFR) and socioeconomic and policy-related factors.
Conclusions: We find that relationships between TFR and widely used social, economic, and policy-related factors (rural Hukou, ethnic minority, female education, net migration rate, poor living standard, sex ratio at birth, fertility policy compliance ratio) vary spatially in terms of direction, strength, and magnitude. This spatial variation is largely due to differences in local characteristics. The differences between and the complexities of localities cannot be told by a single story of either government intervention or socioeconomic development.
Contribution: This study extends existing fertility research on China by explicitly recognizing the spatial heterogeneity in the impact of policy and socioeconomic factors on the local fertility rate. This study sets the stage for future research that will contextually analyze varying fertility rates at the subnational level in China and other countries.
Author's Affiliation
- Donghui Wang - Princeton University, United States of America EMAIL
- Guangqing Chi - Pennsylvania State University, United States of America EMAIL
Other articles by the same author/authors in Demographic Research
How do environmental stressors influence migration? A meta-regression analysis of environmental migration literature
Volume 50 - Article 2
A spatial dynamic panel approach to modelling the space-time dynamics of interprovincial migration flows in China
Volume 41 - Article 31
Most recent similar articles in Demographic Research
Educational trends in cohort fertility by birth order: A comparison of England and Wales, Scotland, and Northern Ireland
Volume 51 - Article 36
| Keywords:
birth order,
cohort analysis,
cross-national study,
England,
family size,
fertility,
Northern Ireland,
parity,
Scotland,
Wales
Higher incomes are increasingly associated with higher fertility: Evidence from the Netherlands, 2008–2022
Volume 51 - Article 26
| Keywords:
fertility,
income,
inequalities,
Netherlands,
parenthood
The short- and long-term determinants of fertility in Uruguay
Volume 51 - Article 10
| Keywords:
fertility,
panel data,
stages of female reproductive life,
time series,
Uruguay
Between money and intimacy: Brideprice, marriage, and women’s position in contemporary China
Volume 50 - Article 46
| Keywords:
brideprice,
China,
divorce,
family,
family law,
gender inequalities,
marriage
The big decline: Lowest-low fertility in Uruguay (2016–2021)
Volume 50 - Article 16
| Keywords:
adolescent fertility,
birth order,
fertility,
Latin America,
ultra-low fertility,
Uruguay
Cited References: 76
Download to Citation Manager
PubMed
Google Scholar