The impact of life-saving interventions on fertility
David Roodman

TL;DR
This paper reviews how life-saving health interventions influence fertility and population growth, finding that effects vary by context and are generally less than or around 1:1, with some exceptions in specific countries.
Contribution
It provides a critical analysis of existing evidence on the relationship between mortality reduction and fertility, highlighting context-dependent variations and long-term trends.
Findings
Impact of interventions varies by context
Fertility reduction is often less than 1:1
Long-term trends suggest decreasing fertility in most regions
Abstract
Many interventions in global health save lives. One criticism sometimes lobbed at these interventions invokes the spirit of Malthus. The good done, the charge goes, is offset by the harm of spreading the earth's limited resources more thinly: more people, and more misery per person. To the extent this holds, the net benefit of savings lives is lower than it appears at first. On the other hand, if lower mortality, especially in childhood, leads families to have fewer children, life-saving interventions could reduce population. This document critically reviews the evidence. It finds that the impact of life-saving interventions on fertility and population growth varies by context, and is rarely greater than 1:1. In places where lifetime births/woman has been converging to 2 or lower, saving one child's life should lead parents to avert a birth they would otherwise have. The impact of…
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