Adverse Child Sex Ratios Challenges for Development - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Adverse Child Sex Ratios Challenges for Development

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Colonial north west India and female infanticide 1970s: Demographers discover long term declines in overall sex ratios; correlated with poverty, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Adverse Child Sex Ratios Challenges for Development


1
Adverse Child Sex RatiosChallenges for
Development
  • International Workshop on Feminist Economics in
    China and India
  • Mary E John

2
The Adverse Child Sex Ratio
  • Does the story begin with Amartya Sen?
  • Colonial north west India and female infanticide
  • 1970s Demographers discover long term declines
    in overall sex ratios correlated with poverty,
    low health and work patterns
  • Womens organisations and health activists
    discover abuse of amniocentesis testing for
    foetal abnormalities in 1982

3
The 1990s
  • Joint activism by women and health groups results
    in first legislation against sex determination
    testing in Maharashtra in 1986
  • 1991 Census data show a decline in both overall
    sex ratio to 927 and CSR (0-6) 945
  • But north-western states CSR around 900
  • National law to regulate pre-natal diagnostic
    techniques (PNDT Act) 1994

4
A new moment 2001 Census
  • For the first time national CSR drops to 927,
    below overall sex ratio (indeed overall sex ratio
    registers a small improvement to 933)
  • Huge drops in states in north west India and
    especially in urban areas
  • Wide scale adoption of sex selective abortion
    especially through ultrasound
  • Also high rates of female child mortality in
    selective areas

5
Problems
  • Uneven regional patterns
  • Prosperity Effect
  • Correlations of high education, lower fertility
    with skewed child sex ratios
  • Two child norm
  • Impunity of Medical Establishment

6
Responses
  • State PCPNDT Act (revised) in 2004
  • Various states launch Schemes for the girl
    child
  • Religious and caste organisations now join the
    fray, given very low CSRs among Sikhs and Hindus
  • New researches both macro and micro
  • NGO campaigns
  • International focus

7
Planning Families, Planning Gender
  • Study conducted by a team of researchers in low
    CSR districts in PU, HA, HP, RA, MP
  • In depth analyses of contextual factors at work
    in these diverse contexts
  • Ranging from poverty to affluence
  • Low CSRs especially among some groups and sites
  • But not specific to particular castes and classes

8
Patterns of low CSR
  • Diverse patterns
  • Sex selection most prevalent and growing
  • High female child mortality in pockets
  • Cases of infanticide

9
Social Indicators
  • Widespread schooling for girls
  • Higher education in Pu, Hp, Ha, where girls even
    outnumber boys
  • Low work participation rates overall
  • Invisibility of womens work
  • Rising ages at marriage 16 in MP and 21 in HP

10
Fertility Patterns
  • Stated preferences one boy, one girl, weak in
    MP strong in HP
  • Fertility declines everywhere to different
    degrees
  • Revealed preferences growing proportion of
    families with one boy, one girl but also two
    boys, two boys, one girl

11
Fertility (contd.)
  • Tiny proportion of families willing to have only
    girls
  • One son norm among families in Punjab
  • At least one son, at most one daughter
  • Not just son preference
  • Daughter aversion

12
Why?
  • Intergenerational transfer of resources
  • New costs of having a daughter with economic
    growth
  • Education, health, care till adulthood
  • Anxieties over daughters sexuality
  • Marriage remains the compulsory institution

13
Problems and differences
  • Aggressive use of technology by medical
    establishment locally and globally, ever newer
    technologies
  • Shortage of women and bare branches
  • Traditional and/or new forms of gender
    discrimination
  • Ethics and language of choice
  • Sex selection and the right to abortion

14
2011
  • Predictions and speculations about Census 2011
  • A turnaround or peaking of the practice?
  • Or even more rampant effects of son preference
    and daughter aversion?

15
CHILD SEX RATIOS (0-6 years), NORTH-WESTERN REGION Census 1991, 2001 and 2011, Females per 1000 Males, Select States CHILD SEX RATIOS (0-6 years), NORTH-WESTERN REGION Census 1991, 2001 and 2011, Females per 1000 Males, Select States CHILD SEX RATIOS (0-6 years), NORTH-WESTERN REGION Census 1991, 2001 and 2011, Females per 1000 Males, Select States CHILD SEX RATIOS (0-6 years), NORTH-WESTERN REGION Census 1991, 2001 and 2011, Females per 1000 Males, Select States CHILD SEX RATIOS (0-6 years), NORTH-WESTERN REGION Census 1991, 2001 and 2011, Females per 1000 Males, Select States CHILD SEX RATIOS (0-6 years), NORTH-WESTERN REGION Census 1991, 2001 and 2011, Females per 1000 Males, Select States
State 1991 2001 CHANGE 2001-1991 2011 CHANGE 2011-2001
Himachal 951 896 -55 906 10
Punjab 875 798 -77 846 48
Haryana 879 819 -60 830 11
Chandigarh 899 845 -46 867 22
Delhi 915 886 -49 888 2
16
CHILD SEX RATIOS (0-6 years), REGION-WISE Census 1991, 2001 and 2011, Females per 1000 Males, Select States CHILD SEX RATIOS (0-6 years), REGION-WISE Census 1991, 2001 and 2011, Females per 1000 Males, Select States CHILD SEX RATIOS (0-6 years), REGION-WISE Census 1991, 2001 and 2011, Females per 1000 Males, Select States CHILD SEX RATIOS (0-6 years), REGION-WISE Census 1991, 2001 and 2011, Females per 1000 Males, Select States CHILD SEX RATIOS (0-6 years), REGION-WISE Census 1991, 2001 and 2011, Females per 1000 Males, Select States CHILD SEX RATIOS (0-6 years), REGION-WISE Census 1991, 2001 and 2011, Females per 1000 Males, Select States CHILD SEX RATIOS (0-6 years), REGION-WISE Census 1991, 2001 and 2011, Females per 1000 Males, Select States
Region States 1991 2001 CHANGE 2001-1991 2011 CHANGE 2011-2001
NORTH CENTRAL Uttar Pradesh 928 916 -12 899 -17
NORTH CENTRAL Madhya Pradesh 952 932 -20 912 -20

WEST Gujarat 928 883 -45 886 3
WEST Rajasthan 916 909 -7 883 -16
WEST Maharashtra 946 913 -33 883 -30
WEST Goa 964 938 -26 920 -18

EAST Bihar 959 942 -17 933 -9
EAST Jharkhand NA 965 943 -22
EAST West Bengal 967 960 -7 950 -10
EAST Nagaland 993 964 -29 944 -20
EAST Orissa 967 953 -14 934 -19

SOUTH Andhra Pradesh 975 961 -14 943 -18
SOUTH Karnataka 960 946 -14 943 -3
SOUTH Tamil Nadu 948 942 -6 946 4
SOUTH Kerala 958 960 2 959 -1
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