Pakistan Development Review, Volume 14Pakistan Institute of Development Economics, 1975 - Pakistan |
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Page 338
... wives reporting first hearing in the more recent as well as the earlier period . Medical personnel were the second ... wives ) , more than twice as many rural wives reported first use after the beginning of the programme as those ...
... wives reporting first hearing in the more recent as well as the earlier period . Medical personnel were the second ... wives ) , more than twice as many rural wives reported first use after the beginning of the programme as those ...
Page 342
... wives between educational level of their husbands and their own reported knowledge and perception of family plauning ( Table 2 ) . For example , 59 percent of urban wives and 38 percent of rural wives having husbands with at least 10 ...
... wives between educational level of their husbands and their own reported knowledge and perception of family plauning ( Table 2 ) . For example , 59 percent of urban wives and 38 percent of rural wives having husbands with at least 10 ...
Page 344
... wives , and more importantly on couples [ 23 ] . In the programme of 1965-70 a strong bias in educational programmes and local - level contacts seems to have been toward wives . It is interesting to note that both urban and rural wives ...
... wives , and more importantly on couples [ 23 ] . In the programme of 1965-70 a strong bias in educational programmes and local - level contacts seems to have been toward wives . It is interesting to note that both urban and rural wives ...
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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