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Population growth rate adds to problems

A family at a makeshift camp for persons displaced by the extensive flooding in the district of Muzzafargarh Jason Tanner/Save The Children
Big families means more mouths to feed
Pakistan’s problems with militancy, a fragile economy and natural disasters such as the 2010 floods have often been discussed, but an even greater threat may be posed by the sheer numbers of people in the country.

According to official figures, the projected population for 2015 is 191 million, up from the current figure of 170 million, making it the sixth most populous nation on earth. By 2050 it is expected to climb into fourth place.

This is bad news for a country that has struggled to provide its people with adequate food, health care or education. Malnutrition rates are high and are linked to 50 percent of infant and child deaths; there is one doctor for every 1,183 people; and the literacy rate of 57 percent is among the lowest in South Asia.

“There is now increasing evidence that investments, among others, in education, health, including reproductive health, women's empowerment and slower population growth contribute towards poverty reduction. In general, it has also been found that where there is rapid population growth and high fertility rates, poverty incidence is also highest,” Rabbi Royan, the UN Population Fund (UNFPA) representative in Pakistan, told IRIN.

“More people, of course, means a further drain on resources,” Sikander Lodhi, an economic analyst, told IRIN. “Resources are already stretched to the limit,” he said.

The same principle holds true within individual households. “Allah [God] has given us eight children. We are fortunate,” said Rafiq Muhammad, 50, a labourer who earns around Rs 5,000 (US$59) a month. His wife, Parveen Bibi, told IRIN: “It is very hard to feed everyone. We do not even get one proper meal a day.”

“People believe large families mean more earning hands; but they do not realize they also mean more eating mouths,” said Rehana Nazeer, a service delivery manager at the Lahore-based Family Planning Association of Pakistan. She told IRIN the “closed, conservative nature of society” and also problems in tending to the health needs of women in rural areas on hormone-based contraception had led to difficulties in promoting birth control.

“If a woman develops a bleeding problem, she cannot get to a doctor on her own. Her husband or other man in the family must take a day off work to take her,” Nazeer said.

According to the Demographic Health Survey of Pakistan, conducted in 2006-07 by the Ministry of Population Welfare, while 96 percent of women who have ever been married are aware of at least one family planning method, fewer than half have ever used one, and less than 30 percent of married women currently use a contraceptive. The survey also shows 25 percent of married couples would like to use contraception but are not doing so, mainly because they lack access to advice or contraceptives.

Difficult to change attitudes

“Many women would like to practice birth control, but their husbands dislike the idea,” Farhat Bibi, a lady health worker, told IRIN. Run by the government’s National Programme for Family Planning and Primary Health Care, the lady health workers’ scheme was started in 1994 to reach out to rural communities and cater to the needs of women and children in particular.

“We offer advice on contraception, but some women are too scared of their husbands to even consider these methods,” she said. The belief that God determined family size, and in some cases that women on the pill may be tempted to have sex outside marriage, confident they would not become pregnant, were key factors in this attitude, Farhat said.

These factors explain why Pakistan has struggled to promote family size. Though the fertility rate has declined gradually over the last 15 years, according to the Demographic Survey, the fertility rate of 4.1 children per woman means the population continues to grow, with an increased strain placed on dwindling resources, including water.

“The high number of pregnancies also means women in particular, and children, suffer more health problems and this further drains resources,” said Samina Iqbal, a doctor who told IRIN: “I always advise my female patients to stick to one or two children, but they face acute family pressure to have more.”

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This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions

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