Abstract:
The Fertility Rate (TFR) in Sri Lanka has increased to 2.51, an increase of 6.4
percentage points from its previous level in mid-2000. The analysis further revealed a
significant increase of fertility among older women in the reproductive age span
compared to previous fertility patterns in the country. Data demonstrates that agespecific
fertility rates (ASFR) in mid-2000 have gone up in all the age groups compared
to the values obtained in 2000, but surprisingly, ages 35 years and above showed a
remarkable increase in 2012 compared to previous years. This indicates an unexpected
outcome despite the prevalence of government and non-governmental fertility control
programmes. This is an unusual trend in fertility behavior by older women in the
reproductive age span because ordinarily, we observe older women terminating their
childbearing at an earlier age than in previous years, which is a strong indicator of the
third stage of fertility transition. It is a known fact that fluctuations in TFR in any
country are due to fertility adjustments during the post-transitional time periods. The
study demonstrates that in Sri Lanka, these adjustments were mainly due to factors such
as postponement of births due to the 30-year long war which ended in 2009, adjustment
of fertility behaviour by women during the post-tsunami period, neglect of
contraceptive use by the older women, unmet need of family planning for older women
and also possibly due to increase of Muslim fertility in the context of a 'minority group
hypothesis'. Furthermore, by examining the fluctuations in TFR in Sri Lanka, the study
predicts that TFR is likely to reach the replacement level of fertility in 2022, based on
the resemblance of this increase of the TFR to that of the post-war baby-boom in the
west.