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Social Justice

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February 24, 2018

Male-skewed Sex Ratio of the Last Child (SRLC) is affecting the health and well-being of women in India. Discuss (200 words)

Refer – The Indian Express

Enrich the answer from other sources, if the question demands.

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IAS Parliament 7 years

KEY POINTS

Son Meta preference

·        Parents may choose to keep having children until they get the desired number of sons. This is called son “meta” preference.

·        Despite multiple social media campaigns and government-sponsored awareness programmes to promote gender equality, the preference for sons continues to be strong among Indian parents.

Sex Ratio of the Last Child (SRLC)

·        It is an indicator that potentially helps to detect the existence of “meta” preference for a son in a society.

·        According to Economic Survey 2018, the aggregate data of all families in India when collated clearly captures that the SRLC is male-skewed.

·        This “boy oriented reproduction” does reduce the overall sex ratio as it contributes more girls (although unwanted).

Impact of Son Meta preference on women

·        Unwanted girls – These are daughters that parents gave birth to when they were really hoping for a son, and were disappointed and dejected hence.

·        Even though such preference does not lead to sex-selective abortion, it may nevertheless be detrimental to female children because it may lead to fewer resources devoted to them.

·        Girls get fewer resources in comparison to boys in general and moreover, parents who passionately want sons, unsurprisingly, favour them once born.

·        They will not receive the deserving healthcare and schooling, due to the gender related partiality.

·        Here, even if parents treat all their children equally, girls are disadvantaged by being in families with fewer resources to spend per child.

·        Boys have been found to get better immunisation and nutrition, which is also reflected in India’s stunting data that displays a visible gender gap.

Way forward

·        Improve earnings opportunities for women, as this would lower dowry and increase their say in family decision-making.

·        Better options for people to support themselves in old age, such as a good pension system, would also make having a son less paramount to couples.

·        Other generic and cultural aspects that reinforcing patriarchy also need to be targeted to achieve a gender neutral society.