Copyright 2003, Judith Banister. All rights reserved. Shortage of Girls in China Today: Causes, Consequences, International Comparisons, and Solutions.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Population and Poverty
Advertisements

The Situation of Women in China Johannes Jütting and Theodora Xenogiani 27 November 2007 Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.
Unpacking ‘Son preference’: the trajectory of a demographic variable Danièle Bélanger, PhD Associate Professor The University of Western Ontario.
China’s One Child Policy
Human Population Describe factors that affect population growth
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 6 Population Growth and Economic Development: Causes, Consequences, and Controversies.
Population Growth and Economic Development
Population Cultural Geography C.J. Cox. Population ● Population Terms ● Population Growth ● Population Distribution ● Population Density ● Population.
Concepts of Demography By Dr Arshad Usmani Lahore, Pakistan
DEMOGRAPHIC DATA 2006 Population: 1,313,973,713 Age structure: 0-14: 21% 15-64: 71% 65+: 8% Population growth rate: 0.6% Birth rate: 13‰
Demography and Aging. What is “demography”? Demography is the study of populations Counting and describing people Age, sex, income, marital status… Demographers.
Case Study 3 – China’s One Child Policy
Chapter Four - Population: World Patterns, Regional Trends Singapore : no more than two in 1960, at least two in 1986: The structure of the present controls.
Population Geography Characteristics of Human Populations.
 Population Geography  Demography  Rates  Cohort  Crude Birth Rate (CBR)  Total Fertility Rate (TFR)  Crude Death Rate (CDR)  Infant Mortality.
The Human Population 8. © 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved. Overview of Chapter 8  The Science of Demography  Demographics of Countries.
Recap of Population so far
Population Geography.
Killing of Female Fetuses The greatest threats to our contemporary civilization.
Dixon High School Seminar China’s Family Planning Policy.
Global Population Aging
Regional Inequalities of Development Examples of Africa and Europe:
The value is expressed from 0 to 1
Planning A population profile allows a country to plan for the future: A population profile allows a country to plan for the future: Children need- schools,
© 2006 Population Reference Bureau Rising Family Planning Use, Developing Countries Married Women 15 to 49 Using Any Method Percent Source: Population.
Figure 1. Private Returns to Educating Females are High at All Levels Percent return 20% 15% 10% 5% 0% Primary SecondaryHigher Averages from country studies.
The Human Population Miss Napolitano & Mrs. Rodriguez Environmental Science.
The Future of East Asia A Population Survey. East Asia — a ticking time bomb? East Asia — a ticking time bomb? East Asia consists of the following countries.
Global Population Issues
Welcome! Please get out objectives #21-25 for a stamp.
Chapter 9 Addressing Population Issues
Diversity of family structures. Concepts Reconstituted family: A household from which one biological parent has departed and children live with the other.
China’s One Child Policy. Billboard in China Facts about China 25% of the world’s population 7% of world’s arable land 8% of the world’s water supply.
The Cultural Geography of Gender. Cultural Influences on Gender Roles Cultural norms can control the advancement or subjugation of women and their status.
© 2006 Population Reference Bureau Women 15 to 24 Millions Growing Number of Young Women Worldwide Source: UN, World Population Prospects: The 2004 Revision.
The Human Population and Its Impact
(in rural China). One Child Policy Introduced in Introduced to resist the health, social and economic problems faced due to the rapidly rising Chinese.
PACIFIER VS. CONDOM PLAN YOUR FAMILY.  China and India together have about 37 % of the worlds population  In 2006 ▪ Chinas population = 1.3 billion.
Chapter 9 Addressing Population Issues
China: 3 population projections to th century China’s demographic transformation The Great Famine, : 30 million deaths and 30.
Human Population Growth om/watch?v=4BbkQi QyaYc&feature=playe r_detailpage.
Population Control Policies. China’s One Child Policy.
China’s One Child Policy During the 1970s the Chinese government realised that the country would be heading for disaster unless population growth was dramatically.
Applying Population Ecology: The Human Population and Its Impact.
World History/ Geo Monday November 30 th, 2015 WARM UP: SHOULD THE GOVERNMENT BE ALLOWED TO CONTROL HOW MANY CHILDREN A FAMILY HAS?
Female Feticide In India Brianna Curry. Gendercide Infanticide has been practiced throughout the world for centuries Girls in India are discriminated.
Dependency Ratio The proportion of persons above 65 years and below 15 years of age are considered to be dependent on the economically productive age.
Population Policies – The Big Two: -China’s One Child Policy -India’s Family Planning.
7.9 Factors That Influence Human Population Growth Humans, unlike other kinds of organisms, can make conscious decisions based on the likely course of.
Chapter 9 Applying Population Ecology: The Human Population and Its Impact.
PRE-BIRTH ELIMINATION OF FEMALES IN INDIA: ISSUES AND CHALLENGES DR. KANUPRIYA CHATURVEDI.
Population Unit 2 Population F Population Terms F Population Growth F Population Distribution F Population Density F Population Characteristics F Population.
A Case study in Pronatalist and Antinatalist Policies.
Measuring the population: importance of demographic indicators for gender analysis Workshop Title Location and Date.
The Human Population and Its Impact Chapter What Factors Influence the Size of the Human Population?  Concept 6-2A Population size increases because.
6.2 Population Growth: Past, Present, and Future
Son preference, maternal health care utilization and infant death in rural China Jiajian Chen 1, Zhenming Xie 2, Hongyan Liu 2 1 East-West Center, USA,
Population Geography I. a. Demography: The study of human populations.
Lecture 6 Population Trends: Historical and Regional Perspectives.
1.38 billion Over 1 billion people live on only 1/3 of the land area.
Understanding Population Change Two useful tools we have that can help us understand causes/reasons for population change are: 1) Population Pyramids 2)
© 2014, 2012, 2010 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Sociology: A Down-to-Earth Approach, 12e James M. Henslin Chapter 20 Population and.
UNIT 2: POPULATION POPULATION PYRAMIDS (PART V) DEPENDENCY RATIO The number of people who are too young or too old to work, compared to the number of.
Chapter 9 Addressing Population Issues
China’s One Child Policy
Population geography POPULATION GROWTH AND POLICY OPTIONS IN THE DEVELOPING WORLD.
The Human Population and Its Impact
Unit 2: Population (Part V) Population pyramids
Demographic Revolution
Presentation transcript:

Copyright 2003, Judith Banister. All rights reserved. Shortage of Girls in China Today: Causes, Consequences, International Comparisons, and Solutions Judith Banister Beijing Javelin Investments

Copyright 2003, Judith Banister. All rights reserved. China: Missing girls or shortage of females Highlights: 1.Real or spurious? Chinas demographic data quality. 2.Sex ratioswhat would be normal? International data. 3.History of Chinas sex ratiosdynasties to year Shortage of girls in rural and urban China. 5.China: Missing girls by parity. 6.Geography of missing girls in China. 7.What causes the dearth of girls in China? 8.What other countries/areas have missing girl problem? 9.Existing and possible policy responses, solutions.

Copyright 2003, Judith Banister. All rights reserved. Real or spurious? China demographic data quality Is it simply that existing girls and the births of girls are hidden and therefore underreported? No. Some data sources seriously underreport births and children of both sexes, for example, registration data and family planning system data. But Chinas censuses and many surveys report the births and existence of boys and girls with approximately equal completeness. Counts are good, age reporting excellent. Even after adjustments for errors, sex ratios are highly distorted. The dearth of females is real.

Copyright 2003, Judith Banister. All rights reserved. Sex RatiosWhat is normal? How does China compare? Normal sex ratio at birth: boys per 100 girls Normal total population sex ratio: Normal sex ratio of death rates: , ratio of male to female death rates at each age Normal sex ratio ages 0-4: Chinas sex ratio at birth (since mid-1980s): boys per 100 girls Chinas total population sex ratio ( ): Chinas sex ratio of death rates ages 0-3 ( ): , ratio of male to female death rates Chinas sex ratio ages 0-4, ( ):

Copyright 2003, Judith Banister. All rights reserved. China abnormal sex ratios, time line: Improved until 1978 Chinas population sex ratios: 1930 rural, 108.5; 1953, 107.6; 1964, Before 1953 census, girls died at every age at a higher rate than boys, due to life-threatening discrimination. By 1964, excess girl mortality ceased by age 6 or 7. In the 1970s, death rates of girls and boys were about the same, which stabilized the sex ratio at 106 through childhood. Therefore, sex ratio imbalance in marriage ages improved from 1964 to 2000.

Copyright 2003, Judith Banister. All rights reserved.

Chinas abnormal sex ratios: Situation deteriorated 1978 to the present : Announcement and implementation of one-child policy, increased coercion in family planning, resurgence of female infanticide present: Sharp rise in sex-selective abortion, increasing excess female infant mortality reported. Reported sex ratio at birth and sex ratio of children at ages 0-4 rose to 120 boys per 100 girls in Two positive trends: Ratio of male to female mortality rates became more normal at ages 2 and above. Sex ratio ages 0-4 stabilized at 120 during

Copyright 2003, Judith Banister. All rights reserved.

China Urban and Rural Sex Ratios Rural China has the most extreme missing girl situation, and urban towns are almost the same. The shortage of girls in Chinas cities is less severe, but the dearth of girls in the cities is still very abnormal. What this signifies is that development, education, and urbanization alone will not solve the missing girl problem in China, though such progress may ameliorate the situation.

Copyright 2003, Judith Banister. All rights reserved. China, Urban and Rural Child Sex Ratios, 2000 Census (Boys per 100 girls) Sex ratio at birth as reported, National Cities Towns Rural areas Sex ratios of children ages 0-4, 2000 Census National Cities Towns Rural areas

Copyright 2003, Judith Banister. All rights reserved. China, Missing Girls by Parity Parents with one or more daughters but no sons are most likely to abort or cause the death of a daughter. Higher parity female fetuses and girls are most at risk. Through 1990, the sex ratio at birth for first parity births was normal. Even with the one-child policy and tight restrictions on numbers of births, couples allowed their first pregnancy to proceed normally. But by 2000, the sex ratio of first births had risen to for China ( in 12 provinces), partly because fertility is so low.

Copyright 2003, Judith Banister. All rights reserved.

China 1982, Sex Ratio Ages 0-14

Copyright 2003, Judith Banister. All rights reserved. China 1990, Sex Ratio Ages 0-14

Copyright 2003, Judith Banister. All rights reserved. China 1995, Sex Ratio Ages 0-14

Copyright 2003, Judith Banister. All rights reserved. China 2000, Sex Ratio Ages 0-14

Copyright 2003, Judith Banister. All rights reserved. Since the early 1980s, has sex-selective abortion replaced female infanticide? Apparently not as the dearth of girls has become more severe over time, sex-selective abortion has become the primary proximate determinant of missing girls. But successive censuses have shown greater excess female infant mortality over time. Proximate causes could be female infanticide, abandonment, neglect, or severe maltreatment of baby girls.

Copyright 2003, Judith Banister. All rights reserved. China Excess Female Infant Mortality, (Infant deaths per 1,000 live births) Death rate measure Male IMR, reported data Female IMR, reported data Normal female IMR Absolute excess female IMR Percent excess female IMR12%28%37%41%

Copyright 2003, Judith Banister. All rights reserved. What causes the shortage of girls in China? Poverty? No, some of Chinas poorest areas have no missing girl problem. But economic considerations matter. Political or economic system? No, compare international. Illiteracy, low educational level? No, but ideas can matter. Han Chinese culture? YES. Also a few minority nationality cultures. But not most, not Muslim cultures. Low fertility? YES. Combined with son preference. One-child policy? Maybe. Seems to worsen excess female infant mortality. Perhaps shortage of girls is more severe than without the one-child policy.

Copyright 2003, Judith Banister. All rights reserved. In Asia, does economic and social development reduce anti-daughter discrimination? Unfortunately not. Not automatically. There is no clear relationship. As shown by Croll, in East and South Asia, the phenomenon of missing girls has worsened as economies have developed, as the status of women has improved, and as female educational attainment has risen. In India, as in China, daughter discrimination is found in urban areas as well as rural, and among educated as well as uneducated mothers. The missing girl situation is extreme in developed East Asian societies, such as South Korea and Taiwan.

Copyright 2003, Judith Banister. All rights reserved. Where is there anti-girl discrimination and a resulting shortage of girls? East Asia: China, Taiwan, South Korea (not Japan) South Asia: India, Nepal, Pakistan Not in most Muslim countries of Arab Middle East, North Africa, Southeast Asia, or Central Asia. Not in most of Latin America, Africa, Middle East, Less Developed, or Least Developed Countries. Not in Europe, North America, Russia. Only certain cultures have such strong traditional anti- daughter bias that is now exacerbated by declining and low fertility, leading to sex-selective abortion and/or excess mortality of daughters.

Copyright 2003, Judith Banister. All rights reserved. Current PRC Policies to Combat Son Preference Laws giving girls and women equal rights with males. Propaganda and consciousness-raising slogans about the equal value and contributions of females and males. Laws outlawing infanticide, prenatal sex identification, and sex-selective abortion. Policies in most provinces allowing rural couples to have two children, or a second child if the first is a girl. Some localities have preferential policies for couples with daughters but no son, for example modest social security guarantees for the parents.

Copyright 2003, Judith Banister. All rights reserved. Other possible initiatives PRC officials and scholars could intensify consultations and information-sharing with other Asian countries that have strong son preference, then try in China whatever works elsewhere. Focused research in China on what now motivates couples to dispose of daughters, followed by creative strategies to address those concerns. Enhance the rights of daughters and the responsibilities of daughters toward their natal families throughout their lives. Land and inheritance rights for femaleshow to implement?

Copyright 2003, Judith Banister. All rights reserved. Other Solutions: Deal with the ethical dilemma of supporting abortion rights in general while discouraging sex- selective abortion. Publicity, education, and propaganda on the human rights of girls and women. Work to change the culture and attitudes. Increase legal rights of girls and women and vigorously enforce those rights. Implement and expand social security systems for old age in rural and urban areas, so parents do not have to depend on sons.