Title: Population masculinization in Asia. Regional trends
1Population masculinization in Asia.Regional
trends
- CZ Guilmoto, IRD, Paris
- Hanoi,
- 20 December 2007
2- An overview of the problem
- Growing male proportion in Asia
- Demographic scenarios and implications
3The sex-ratio story in a nutshell
- Fertility declines, but son preference remains
strong across Asian countries - New methods appear to influence the sex of ones
children - Sex ratio at birth (SRB) shoots up as a result
and births include now 5-20 more boys than
expected - In 20 years, a marriage squeeze of similar
proportions will occur with excess young adult
men - Family systems and society will undergo deep
adjustments with serious consequences to men as
well as to women
4A brief technical reminder
- Sex ratio 100 males /females
- 1 Sex ratio and age
- Highest at conception (primary sex ratio)
- Decreases till delivery through foetal
mortality (secondary sex ratio) - Decreases during infancy and childhood, and even
faster during adulthood and old age through male
excess mortality - 2. Overall population sex ratio
- Affected by SRB (sex ratio at birth) and sex
patterns of mortality, as well as by the overall
age structure (the older the population, the more
feminine) - Especially sensitive to migration differentials
by sex
5Biology, social and health conditions
Infant and child mortality
Spontaneous and induced abortions
Sex ratio at birth
Sex ratio at conception
Child sex ratio
Conception
Childhood
Pregnancy and birth
Sex-selective abortions
Female infanticide
Sex selection before conception
Female excess infant and child mortality
Discriminatory behaviour
6Technical issues
- 1 Sex ratio at birth
- Seldom available for want of proper registration
data - 2 Sex ratio among children
- Easily computed from census data
- Combines the effect of pre- and post-natal
gender discrimination - 3 Sex ratio among adults
- Often heavily affected by migration
differentials - 4 Measurement and sensitivity
- Sex ratio often not meaningful for less than
10,000 people - 5.Data availability
- Faulty civil registration, missing censuses,
surveys with small samples
7Sex ratio deterioration (and fertility decline)
two scenarios
high
2 masculinization
sex ratio at birth
missing girls
normal
1 no change
Fertility decline
high fertility
low fertility
8Affected regions
- Already highly affected Central and Eastern
China, Taiwan, North-West India, South Korea,
Caucasus - Increasing sex ratio at birth rest of India,
Vietnam, West China - Might soon be affected Nepal, Bangladesh,
Pakistan, etc.
9Fertility levels, 2005
10- An overview of the problem
- Growing male proportion in Asia
- Demographic scenarios and implications
11Growing male proportion in Asia
- High and stable population sex ratio in several
Asian countries - Increased male proportions among births since
1980 - Caused by rising numbers of sex-selective
abortions combined to excess mortality among
girls
12A male-dominated continent
- Today Asia has 2.1 billion men and 1.9 b women, a
sex ratio of 105 men per 100 women. But if it had
the same sex ratio as in the rest of the world
(97), Asia would have 163 million more women - This gender gap is due to many reasons such age
structure, migration, and especially to past and
present excess female mortality starting from
childhood - But rising sex ratio at birth in Asia has now
become a major component to this deficit of women
13Overall sex ratio in 2005 in Asia (selected
countries)
14The old patterns of gender discrimination
- Strong son preference
- But age-old methods
- folk methods to conceive sons, female
infanticide, neglect of girls - Limited reliability and social constraints
- High fertility does not require intense gender
discrimination - Moderate increase in proportions of boys
15The new patterns of discrimination
- New prenatal sex determination technology
- Easier access to abortion
- Limited number of children
- Rise in proportions of boys born as parity
progresses
16Child sex ratio, selected countries, 1950-2005
17Main determinants of increase in child sex ratio
- Abnormal sex ratio at birth due to sex selection
- Excess female mortality among infants and
children due to neglect of girls
18Sex ratio at birth, region, 1950-2005
19Korea and Sri Lanka, 1965-2005
20Excess female child mortality, 2005
21Significant variations in sex ratio at birth
- Sex ratio and birth order and gender composition
of children - variations across regions, according to
socioeconomic status or education levels, and to
cultural or religious features
22Sex ratio and birth order, China, 1990
23Variations within countries
- SRB is significantly higher in
- Regional clusters such as Northwest India, East
and Central China, Vietnam, South Korea etc. - Among Indian Sikhs, Chinese Han, etc.
- Among urban and better-off Indians, rural Chinese
etc.
24Geographical variations in India, 2001
Child sex ratio, India, 2001 (districts)
25Sex ratio at birth among selected ethnic groups,
China, 2000
26- An overview of the problem
- Growing male proportion in Asia
- Demographic scenarios and implications
27Projection hypotheses
- 1 Projection for China and India, 2000-2050
- 2 Same mortality and fertility as in United
Nations projections - 3 SRB in Asia in the future
- worsening ?
- high and stable ?
- or falling down ?
28Three scenarios of future SRB
SRB
Time
29Overall sex ratio, 2000-50
30Male surplus deficit in the 20-49 age group,
2030-50 (in million)
31Impact on the overall sex ratio in 2050
- If SRB declines (High-Low) till 2030
- The overall sex ratio remains above 100 in 2050
in China (104) and India (103) - 2. If SRB remains till 2050 at its current levels
- The overall sex ratio rises to 108 in China and
106 in India - 3. The sex ratio will increase further to 115-117
if SRB keeps on rising
32Impact on the population aged 20-49 in 2040-50
- If SRB declines (High-Low) till 2030
- There will be in 2040 33 millions more men than
women in China and 25 in India - 2. If SRB remains the same
- The male surplus will rise to 40 m in China and
28 m. in India - 3. If SRB keeps on rising, the surplus of men
would exceed 55 m. in 2050
33Global impact of sex ratio scenarios
- 1 Lower population with higher SRB
- 2 Overall sex ratio remains masculine till 2050
in all scenarios - 3 Considerable male surplus among young adults,
which are too large to be offset by cross-border
migration - 4 Severity of the crisis in proportion to
duration and magnitude of the SRB increase
34Implications on men and women
- Family structure
- Changing family composition and patterns
- The marriage squeeze
- Increased migration of unmarried men and women
- Trafficking in women, gender-based violence and
demand for commercial sex - Impact felt disproportionally on underprivileged
male population - Decreasing female participation and political
weight