Pakistan Development Review, Volume 14Pakistan Institute of Development Economics, 1975 - Pakistan |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 53
Page 338
... method which was known to the respondent in the Impact Survey of 1968-69 , the following question was asked : " Have you ( or your husband ) ever used ( name of method ) ? " The interviewer was instructed to probe as to whether the ...
... method which was known to the respondent in the Impact Survey of 1968-69 , the following question was asked : " Have you ( or your husband ) ever used ( name of method ) ? " The interviewer was instructed to probe as to whether the ...
Page 339
reported first using any method before September 1965 ( Appendix Table 4 ) compared with only 13 percent of those illiterate . Among urban women under 30 years of age , the proportion of those literate reporting first use of any method ...
reported first using any method before September 1965 ( Appendix Table 4 ) compared with only 13 percent of those illiterate . Among urban women under 30 years of age , the proportion of those literate reporting first use of any method ...
Page 361
... method . Among urban women who said they had ever used any method , slightly more reported first use before the national pro- gramme of 1965 began than those who reported first use afterward . The reverse was true among rural women ...
... method . Among urban women who said they had ever used any method , slightly more reported first use before the national pro- gramme of 1965 began than those who reported first use afterward . The reverse was true among rural women ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
age distribution age groups agricultural analysis Appendix Table ASFR average Bahawalnagar calories capital changes coefficients cohort constant prices consumption contraception conversion factor cost cotton crops currently married demand for money demographic devaluation developing countries Development Economics differentials districts domestic effect employment estimates expected expenditure exports family planning Farms female fertility desires firms foreign growth rate Gujranwala Impact Survey imports income increase industries inputs Institute of Development investment Islamabad Jhang Karachi Khan Lahore life-time migrants living children marriage MNCs Mohammad Afzal Multan Muzaffargarh number of living Nuptiality Tables other-employed output Pakistan Development Review Pakistan Institute pattern percent Percentage Reporting period Peshawar problem production programme Punjab purdah Quetta Rahimyar Khan ratio Rawalpindi relationship relative rural areas rural wives Sahiwal sample Sargodha Sheikhupura Sialkot significant social Statistical Sukkur tion Total trade urban areas value added variables wage West Pakistan yarn