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Fertility Decline and Increasing Gender Imbalance in India, Including a Possible South Indian Turnaround
Author(s) -
Basu Alaka Malwade
Publication year - 1999
Publication title -
development and change
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.267
H-Index - 93
eISSN - 1467-7660
pISSN - 0012-155X
DOI - 10.1111/1467-7660.00116
Subject(s) - fertility , tamil , inequality , population , demography , total fertility rate , convergence (economics) , demographic economics , geography , development economics , socioeconomics , economic growth , economics , sociology , family planning , research methodology , mathematical analysis , linguistics , philosophy , mathematics
Birth rates in India have been in a definite decline since about 1985. However, contrary to our assumption that fertility declines in this region hinge on improvements in the status of women, declining fertility seems to be going hand in hand with worsening population sex ratios. This article examines the evidence for a causal connection between fertility decline and increasing gender imbalance by looking at differences in fertility and in gender inequalities between North and South India in the past, and their increasing convergence in gender inequalities in recent years. It pays special attention to the southern state of Tamil Nadu which has been in the forefront of the country's fertility decline but is nevertheless moving towards a North Indian pattern in many aspects of women's status. The Tamil Nadu example is a particularly striking way of studying the country‐wide trend because it represents a break from the past, in contrast to North India, where increasing gender differentials may be seen more as an accentuation of long‐existing trends. The main problem seems to be that pressures to lower fertility are occurring independently of a change in underlying son preferences and falls in fertility are being aided by technologies which allow one to manipulate not just the sex composition of living children, but also that of children as yet unborn. Some policy implications of this last situation are discussed.