India has a male-female ratio problem. Every Indian family prefers boys. For one thing, boys have the economic power in adulthood to take care of parents in their old age. For another, girls and their dowries and trying to marry them off are expensive propositions.
This seems contradictory to us, in our market-driven economy. For us, the value of a thing increases as it becomes rarer. However, in culturally-driven situations this rationale doesn’t necessarily hold sway. Women in India simply do not have the same status as men to begin with, and they certainly don’t have the earning power or the economic freedom after they marry to be able to take care of their parents. Once a woman marries she is under the thumb of her husband and her husband’s family. In some cases, she can be maneuvered into having to beg her family of origin for more “dowry money” even though she is already married and in theory has been accepted into her husband’s family at the asking price when the marriage took place.
Thus, as a result of cultural prejudice and India’s population control programs, there simply aren’t enough women to go around. As FuturePundit noted a few years ago:
The adverse sex ratio has not increase the value of women by decreasing the supply. India’s population sex ratio worsened from 972 females per 1000 males in 1901 to 929 per 1000 in 1991. At the same time, women's status steadily eroded despite gains in some sectors by some groups. A ‘shortage’ of women does not lead to their increased value, but to greater restrictions and control placed over them. In China, practices such as kidnapping and sale of women, organized import of wives from other countries, etc., have been noted as a result of the shortage of women there. The same might be predicted for India. |
In a bid to correct the male-female sex ratio while promoting population control, the Ministry of Human Resource Development has decided to waive fees and hand scholarships to all girls from single-child families until the post-graduation level. | |
It will be effective from the next academic session in all non-professional courses. Any single girl child of parents who have consciously adopted family planning measures after the birth of their single child would be eligible under the scheme. |
In some ways this is a clever scheme because it hits a vital nerve for all Indians. They revere education and make sacrifices to insure that their children — especially the boys — receive good schooling. By offering this to the parents of girls, they level the playing field somewhat.
But only somewhat. There is still the cultural preference for boys and there is still the drive to sharply curtail the population. Thus girl fetuses are aborted at an alarming rate, as they are all over Asia. Criminalization of sex-preference abortions has had no effect on this trend, nor will it, at least not until the underlying economic fears are addressed.
Japan offers proof of this. There, girls are well-educated and are economically free to support their parents. So guess what happens?
In a surprising repudiation of the traditional Asian values that for centuries have put a premium on producing male heirs, surveys show that up to 75 percent of young Japanese parents now prefer baby girls. Daughters are seen as cuter, easier to handle, more emotionally accessible and, ever more important in this fast-aging society, more likely to look after their elderly parents. |
One final observation about the consequences, historically, for boy and girl children in rural agricultural societies in the West, societies similar to the rural agrarian features of India. This one is from Germany:
The analysis of records from the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries turned up a couple of hundred cases where one spouse died, leaving a number of living children. In this monogamous, Christian, agricultural society, if a young wife lost her husband she almost invariably became very poor. Any sons that she had were unlikely to compete adequately with boys from richer families, but her daughters…always had some chance of marrying up the social ladder. An investment in daughters in this particular social situation had an adaptive biological significance and, as evolutionary biology would predict, the sons of widows were 36 per cent more likely to die in infancy and childhood than the daughters. When men lost their wives, however, their economic status did not change and they often had the opportunity to remarry; the sons of widowers were no more likely to die young than their daughters. |
Hat tip: Fjordman
4 comments:
The German analysis is absolutely fascinating, and take on the situation I had never even considered.
What I very much fear in the case of China, though, whom I believe has a far higher current female to male deficit, is that the natural tendency toward balance would be helped along by a overloaded testosterone ridden push to war.
Dymphna
I heard this comedy routine on NPR once about China’s one child policy. The result of the policy is that everyone is an only child. A whole country of spoiled brats. It was a series of jokes about stereotypical only child behavior as national policy. Spoiled brats are not inclined to be cooperative. It was more scarry than the reports of the Chinese military build up.
In medieval folklore ferries were not inclined to do favors for humans but kept their word when they made a promise. I wonder what Cinderella’s mom did that the ferry godmother was obligated to help Cinderella?
Hank--
The fairy godmother was probably a stand-in for a maternal spinster aunt. They ususally watch over their sisters' children with somewhat more care than would a brother. Simply a mater of what we're hard-wired to pay attention to.
Airforce wife and Cathy--
they estimate China had 165,000,000 forced abortions. That's not even dealing with infanticide, though the latter is not as widely practiced as it once was.
I hadn't heard about the imbalance due to hepatitis B infection. The more we learn about teh ramificatons of personal and social health ramifications, the more awed I am
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