阿拉伯世界的人口变化:埃及和摩洛哥移民、教育和税收的影响。

Y. Courbage
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引用次数: 24

摘要

自本世纪初以来,埃及和摩洛哥的人口分别从大约1000万增加到5700万,从不足500万增加到2550万。埃及和摩洛哥是两个人口最多的阿拉伯国家。经过长时间的人口增长,他们采取了较少的生育立法,并从20世纪60年代开始实施计划生育计划。当时埃及的总生育率(TFR)是每名妇女生育6.7个孩子,低于大多数阿拉伯国家,也低于摩洛哥的7.2。然而,从那时起,埃及的生育率一直保持在5-6,直到1989年才降至5以下。摩洛哥的总生育率在1973年增加到7.4,在1973-77年期间下降到5.9,1989年降到4以下。作者质疑为什么生育控制项目的目标在埃及没有实现,而在摩洛哥却被超越了。关于避孕普及率和母乳喂养做法的现有数据预测的情况正好相反。1987年摩洛哥和1988年埃及分别有35.9%和37.8%的人采取了节育措施。然而,摩洛哥有6.9%的人使用效果较差的传统方法,而埃及只有2.4%的人使用这种方法。埃及妇女母乳喂养婴儿17.3个月,而摩洛哥妇女为14.4个月,而在20-24岁之间,60%的埃及妇女已婚,而摩洛哥妇女的这一比例为45%。摩洛哥和埃及的家庭抵制人口转变的传统解释。结论是,尽管教育状况影响马格里布和马什里克地区的生育率,但更高的女性劳动力参与率、国家-公民财政关系和外国移民发挥了主要的决定作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Demographic change in the Arab world: the impact of migration, education and taxes in Egypt and Morocco.
The populations of Egypt and Morocco have grown since the beginning of the century from approximately 10 to 57 million and less than 5 to 25.5 million, respectively. Egypt and Morocco are two of the most populous Arab countries. After a long period of demographic growth, they adopted less pronatalist legislation and implemented family planning programs starting in the 1960s. Egypt's rate of total fertility (TFR) at that time was 6.7 children per woman, lower than most of the Arab world and lower than Morocco's 7.2. Egypt's fertility since then, however, has remained at 5-6, only dropping below 5 in 1989. TFR in Morocco increased to 7.4 in 1973, declined to 5.9 over the period 1973-77, and fell below 4 in 1989. The author questions why the goals of fertility control programs have not been reached in Egypt, yet have been surpassed in Morocco. Available data on contraceptive prevalence and breastfeeding practices would predict the opposite to be the case. 35.9% used birth control methods in Morocco in 1987 and 37.8% in Egypt in 1988. 6.9%, however, used less effective traditional methods in Morocco compared to only 2.4% who used such methods in Egypt. Egyptian women breastfeed their babies for 17.3 months compared to 14.4 months among Moroccan women, while between the ages 20-24, 60% of Egyptian women are married compared to 45% of women in Morocco. Moroccan and Egyptian families resist traditional explanations of demographic transition. It is concluded that although educational status affects fertility in the Maghrib and Mashriq, greater female labor force participation, state-citizen fiscal relations, and foreign migration play major determining roles.
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