Exposing Population Control: Tanzania

 

The East African country of Tanzania suffers from many challenges, but overpopulation is not one of them. The subtropical country has a land area larger than California, Michigan, Arizona, and Virginia combined, and a population only about the size of California’s and Virginia’s combined.

But if you look at the website of USAID, the United States federal agency responsible for foreign aid, you might think that Tanzania was dangerously overpopulated. That’s how it justifies ignoring real health needs in favor of funding mostly drugs and devices to stop people from having children.

  • 16% of children under five in Tanzania are underweight[i], yet USAID only spends 20 cents on nutrition for every dollar they spend on contraception.[ii]
  • One in nine Tanzanian children will die before their fifth birthday[iii], and Tanzanian women have a one out of 23 lifetime risk of maternal death.[iv] Yet USAID only spends 36 cents on maternal and child health for every dollar they spend on contraception.[v]
  • Only 12% of the entire country has use of improved sanitation facilities (a flushable toilet or a ventilated improved pit latrine)[vi], and fewer than half of children with diarrhea receive rehydration salts[vii]. Yet USAID only spends 23 cents on water and sanitation for every dollar it spends on contraception.[viii]

USAID might justify their statistics if the Tanzanian people were desperately pleading for more contraception. But they are not. Maybe the United States government could justify spending more on contraception than it spends on maternal health, child health, water, sanitation, nutrition, and tuberculosis combined  in one of the poorest countries in the world (GDP per capita is $1,700 per year[ix]). Yes, maybe it could justify its funding discrepancies if Tanzanian women wanted, more than anything, to stop having children. But they don’t.

Those who say that the women of Tanzania want boatloads of U.S. contraceptives point to the fact that the average Tanzanian woman has 5.4 children.[x] They are shocked that, despite this reproductive profligacy, the contraceptive prevalence rate is only 34%.[xi]

But what do the women of Tanzania (as opposed to the women who work in the Obama administration) want? It turns out that they want children. According to surveys, ⅔ of Tanzanian women who have four living children don’t desire to stop childbearing.[xii] Half of Tanzanian women who have five children don’t want to limit childbearing, and ⅓ of women with six or more living children don’t want to limit childbearing.[xiii] These desires accurately reflect the 5.4 fertility rate observed in the country.

The *low* contraceptive prevalence rate of 34% is misleading as well. Over 60% of unmarried women and over 50% of married women in their twenties have used modern contraceptives at some point.[xiv] But they stopped using them. Can you guess why? Population control advocates would have you believe that women only stop using contraception because of issues of cost or access. Wrong. In fact, fewer than 1% of Tanzanian women stopped using contraception because of cost. And more Tanzanian women stop using contraception because of “infrequent sex” than issues of access.[xv]

The primary reason that the women of Tanzania discontinue the use of contraception is to become pregnant. The second most common reason is that they dislike the way that contraceptive drugs and devices affect their bodies and their health. The third most common reason for discontinuing is that they are currently pregnant. Together, these three reasons total 70% of the reasons that Tanzanian women give for discontinuing the contraceptives provided by unwitting U.S. taxpayers.[xvi]

And the population controllers at USAID don’t like it one bit! How dare these women make their own reproductive choices, they seem to say. Why can’t they all be like Sandra Fluke, swallowing their free contraceptives without a qualm and demanding more?

Well, perhaps it’s because they value all family sizes, large and small alike. Perhaps they also understand that Tanzania is not overpopulated. Perhaps they understand that their children are not dying from lack of contraception, but from water-borne diseases and lack of medical care.

The inability of USAID to shed its outdated notions of overpopulation would almost be funny if so many Tanzanian children weren’t dying in consequence. You would think that Obama, who styles himself an anti-imperialist, would be more sympathetic to the desires of the African people. Instead he has doubled down on reproductive imperialism, spending more money to abort, sterilize and contracept the African (and Asian and Latin American) people than ever before.

The next time he goes on an “apology tour” overseas, we suggest that he apologize for pushing abortion, sterilization and contraception on people who are crying out for clean drinking water, food, and basic health care.

USAID funding, spending contraception Tanzania family planning

(Image is a screen shot from the USAID website)

 

[i] “Central Intelligence Agency.” The World Factbook. Central Intelligence Agency, n.d. Web. 9, April, 2014. <https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/tz.html>.

[ii] “Health in Tanzania.” Dollars to Results. USAID, n.d. Web. 09 Apr. 2014. <http://results.usaid.gov/tanzania/health#fy2012>.

[iii] “Trends.” Tanzania. World Health Organization, n.d. Web. 09 Apr. 2014. <http://www.who.int/pmnch/activities/countries/tanzania/en/index1.html>.

[iv] “Lifetime Risk of Maternal Death.” Data Finder. Population Reference Bureau, n.d. Web. 09 Apr. 2014. <http://www.prb.org/DataFinder/Topic/Rankings.aspx?ind=247>.

[v] “Health in Tanzania.” Dollars to Results. USAID.

[vi] “Central Intelligence Agency.” The World Factbook. Central Intelligence Agency, n.d. Web. 9, April, 2014. <https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/tz.html>.

[vii] “Tanzania, United Republic of.” UNICEF. UNICEF, 31 Dec. 2013. Web. 09 Apr. 2014. <http://www.unicef.org/infobycountry/tanzania_statistics.html>.

[viii] “Health in Tanzania.” Dollars to Results. USAID.

[ix] “Central Intelligence Agency.” The World Factbook. Central Intelligence Agency, n.d. Web. 9, April, 2014. <https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/tz.html>.

[x] “Tanzania.” Data Finder. Population Reference Bureau, n.d. Web. 09 Apr. 2014. <http://www.prb.org/DataFinder/Geography/Data.aspx?loc=289>.

[xi] Ibid.

[xii] “STATcompiler.” STATcompiler. Demographic and Health Surveys, 09 Apr. 2014. <http://www.statcompiler.com/>.

[xiii] Ibid.

[xiv] Ibid.

[xv] Ibid.

[xvi] Ibid.

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