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&. Family Planning, Human Development and Growth in Uganda. Jouko Kinnunen, VATT Hans Lofgren, World Bank Dino Merotto, World Bank Presentation for the Twelfth Annual Conference on Global Economic Analysis, Santiago, Chile June 10-12, 2009. THE WORLD BANK
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& Family Planning, Human Developmentand Growth in Uganda Jouko Kinnunen, VATT Hans Lofgren, World Bank Dino Merotto, World Bank Presentation for the Twelfth Annual Conference on Global Economic Analysis, Santiago, Chile June 10-12, 2009 THE WORLD BANK GOVERNMENT INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH(VATT),Finland
Background and Motivation • Extremely high fertility and youthful population in Uganda; why a problem? • Development and public expenditure planning needs of GoU • Need to endogenize population in MAMS • Role of fertility within development • Recent changes in the international politics of family planning
Research Questions • What is the impact of increased family planning (FP) services on macro and MDG indicators in Uganda? • Does the way of financing the increased (?) public expenditure on FP matter? • How sensitive are the results to FP cost estimates?
Main results • Major effects of FP: • improved EV welfare for (living) Ugandans; • better outcomes for MDG indicators; and • creation of additional fiscal space in the medium- to long-run • Macro-level effects are otherwise minor • ”Domesticity” of the adjusting government income variable plays a role • Expected per-capita cost of FP very moderate • Qualitative results are not very sensitive to the cost of FP
Current situation • Total fertility rate (TFR) close to 7 children • Dependency ratio = [population not 14-65]/[population 14-65] = 110 percent • Unmet demand for contraceptives for 41% of households • Current contraception prevalence = 24% • 2 out of 7 children unwanted • High pressure on land use potential for conflicts • Pressures on public expenditure on health and education • Dependency of GoU on foreign aid (its value similar to direct tax receipts)
Economics and Demography • Links between growth in per-capita GDP and population • Age structure affects labor supply, private and public consumption, investment, and productivity • Human development and demography closely linked: MDGs, social services • Increasing number of CGE models with (at least partly) endogenous demography
MAMS • MAMS = Maquette for MDG Simulations • Developed at World Bank; applied to 35 countries (in many cases in collaboration with UNDESA and UNDP) • Used to analyze medium- to long-run impact of strategies, including effects on monetary poverty and human development (MDG indicators). • Recursive-dynamic single-country model • Government services modeled in relatively detailed fashion: public sector as producer, consumer, and investor • Productivity impact of public infrastructure • MDGs covered in Uganda application: 1 (headcount poverty), 2 (net primary completion), 4 (under-five mortality), 5 (maternal mortality), 7 (access to improved water) • For more information on MAMS: www.worldbank.org/mams
The demographic extension • Population disaggregated by gender and (one-year) age cohorts • Fertility and mortality modeled with two-level constant elasticity and logistic functions (mimics modeling of MDGs in MAMS) • Constant net migration rates
Fertility (by age of mother, sex of child) at time t Mortality (sex,age) at time t Migration (sex, age) at time t Population(sex,age) at time t+1 The dynamics of the demographic extension Population(sex,age) at time t (beginning of the year)
BASE scenario 2003-2030 • Annual GDP growth 6.2% (recent average growth rate). • Growth in government consumption declines due to completed reforms in primary education • Improvements in MDGs • In terms of official MDG targets, only MDG1 (poverty) is attained by 2015 • TFR falls from 7.3 in 2003 to 5.6 in 2030 • Compared to UN medium variant projection: • population growth rate (3.1% 2003-2030) is very close; • dependency ratio, mortality and fertility rates are all higher
Real growth of GDP components, percent under BASE scenario 2009-2030
Policy simulations: increased family planning • Gradual increase in spending on FP starting from 2007, ceteris paribus reducing the fertility rate by 20% in each year (of what it otherwise would be at that year) with simulation-specific financing adjustments: • fp-ftr foreign transfers • fp-tax domestic taxation • fp-db domestic borrowing • fp-fb foreign borrowing
Results for FP scenarios • Small macro effects: sligtly slower GDP growth, higher export share of GDP, more rapid growth in higher consumption per capita • Impact of FP on public expenditure: higher 2007-2016, lower 2017+ • Very small differences in demographic outcomes between FP scenarios • ”Domesticity” of the clearing variable for government expenditure matters: most favorable macro effects when changes (increases) in fiscal space are used to adjust (cut) taxes. • Population in 2030 declines from 61.0 to 53.7 million
Base scenario Women Men FP-tax scenario
Sensitivity to cost of FP • Even five-fold annual per-couple cost of protection (~$15 to ~76$) does not change the qualitative result of the study – FP economically beneficial in the long run • Government expenditures lower than under BASE first in year 2023 instead of 2017 • An evaluation of whether FP is desirable or not does not only depend on economic outcomes
Change in Government Expenditurewhen Annual Cost of Protection per Couple is: $76 $15 $31
Final Conclusions & Remarks • Major effects of FP: • improved EV welfare for (living) Ugandans; • better outcomes for MDG indicators; and • creation of additional fiscal space in the medium- to long-run • Expected per-capita cost of FP very moderate • Integration of economywide and demographic models is often desirable • Topics for possible future studies using this framework (with marginal adjustments) include various issues in health economics, including AIDS
Thank Your for Your Attention!¡Muchas gracias por su atención!jouko.kinnunen@vatt.fihlofgren@worldbank.orgdmerotto@worldbank.org