By Wallace Mawire
The United Nations Population (UNFPA) together with the Government of Zimbabwe and partners has launched its flagship report State of World Population Report showing a significant decline in fertility rates globally, especially among young people.
According to UNFPA’s 2025 State of World Population (SWOP) report titled: “The Real Fertility Crisis: The pursuit of reproductive agency in a changing world” millions of people are unable to have the number of children they want, not because they are rejecting parenthood but economic and social barriers are stopping them.
The report reveals that 1 in 5 people globally expect not to have the number of children they desire due to barriers such as high cost of parenthood and health care, job insecurity and the lack of a suitable partner. More than half of 10,000 survey respondents said economic issues were a factor in having fewer children than wanted.
“Vast numbers of people are unable to create the families they want,” said Dr. Natalia Kanem, Executive Director of UNFPA. “The issue is lack of choice, not desire, with major consequences for individuals and societies. That is the real fertility crisis, and the answer lies in responding to what people say they need: paid family leave, affordable fertility care, and supportive partners.”
These findings mirror the situation in Zimbabwe where couples, especially in urban areas are reducing the sizes of their families. Total Fertility Rate (TFR) – the average number of children a woman would have by the end of her childbearing years if she bore children at the current age-specific fertility rates – dropped 4.3 children per woman in 1994 to 3.8 in 2005-06. Since then, it has remained largely stable, currently standing at 3.9 in the 2023-24 Zimbabwe Demographic and Health Survey.
On average, a woman in Zimbabwe will have about 4 children in her lifetime (TRF 3.9). When disaggregated by place of birth women in rural areas (about 5 children per woman – TFT 4,6 tend to have more children than those in urban areas (about 3 children per woman – TFR 3.1). Women in urban areas begin childbearing 2 years later, on average, than rural women (21.1 versus 19.4 years).
In his keynote address and in line with the 2025 SWOP report’s call for greater reproductive autonomy the Minister of Health and Child Care Dr. Douglas Mombeshora said:
“The Government of Zimbabwe upholds reproductive rights, empowering individuals to choose the number, timing, and spacing of children they want to have, free from coercion. Fertility rates are a key driver of Zimbabwe’s continued population growth and contribute significantly to its youthful demographic structure. We will continue to support policies to ensure we prevent low birth rates.”
In Zimbabwe, fertility rates decrease as household wealth increases. Women in the lowest wealth quintile have significantly more children (5.5) compared to those in the highest quintile (2.6). Women in the lowest wealth quintile have their first birth, on average, 3 years earlier (19.0 years) than women in the highest quintile (21.9 years).
Even if women, especially those in the workplace, desire to have more children childcare responsibilities often makes it difficult for them to pursue career advancement, maintain full-time employment or engage in professional development opportunities. This in part explains why women in the highest wealth quintile have less children.
According to the report, Gender inequality deepens the crisis. Gender inequality, unpaid caregiving, and unequal domestic roles are silent drivers of underachieved fertility goals. Women still do 3 to 10 times more unpaid domestic and childcare work than men. At least 14% of survey respondents said they won’t have the number of children they want because they lack a partner or lack a suitable partner.
UK Development Director and Deputy Head of Mission Dr. Jo Abbot said:
“The UK is proud to stand with Zimbabwe and UNFPA in championing reproductive rights and choices. This report is a wake-up call: when people are unable to have the families they want due to economic or social barriers, it’s not just a personal loss – it’s a development challenge. We are committed to supporting policies and partnerships that empower individuals, especially women and young people, to make informed, free choices about their futures.”
UNFPA urges governments to empower people to make informed reproductive decisions freely, including by investing in affordable housing, decent work, parental leave and the full range of reproductive health services and reliable information.
“This report underscores a critical truth: the ability to choose the size and timing of one’s family is a fundamental human right. When economic precarity, gender inequality, and societal pressures limit these choices, we face a ‘real fertility crisis,” said UNFPA Country
Representative Ms. Miranda Tabifor. “UNFPA is committed to working with all partners to ensure that every individual has the resources and support needed to realize their reproductive aspirations, fostering societies where rights and choices are universal.”
The State of World Population report is UNFPA’s annual flagship publication. Published yearly since 1978, it shines a light on emerging issues in the field of sexual and reproductive health and rights, bringing them into the mainstream and exploring the challenges and opportunities they present for international development.