A Girl and a Boy, Are a Bundle of Joy: A Rise in Gender-Equitable Fertility Preferences in India.

IF 1.9 3区 医学 Q2 DEMOGRAPHY
Isha Bhatnagar
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Within the last decade, declining son preference in Asia has given rise to gender-equitable fertility preferences. These include daughter preference, gender indifference, and gender balance. Using five rounds of the India National Family Health Surveys, I investigate the sources of the trends in shifting parental preferences for the gender of their children. Over more than a quarter-century period (1992-1993 to 2019-2021), I find a significant decline in son preference from 40 to 18 percent and an increase in gender-equitable preferences among most subpopulations. Multivariate analysis shows that for all survey years, education and frequent exposure to television significantly increased the odds of gender-equitable preferences. In the last decade, community norms supporting women's employment are also associated with gender-equitable preferences. In addition, decomposition analysis shows that compared to compositional change, social norm change accounts for two-thirds of the rise in gender-equitable preferences. These findings suggest that rising norms of gender equality have the potential to dismantle gender-biased preferences in India.

一个女孩和一个男孩,是一束快乐:印度性别平等生育偏好的上升。
在过去十年中,亚洲重男轻女的减少导致了性别平等的生育偏好。这包括重男轻女、性别冷漠和性别平衡。利用五轮印度全国家庭健康调查,我调查了父母对子女性别偏好转变趋势的来源。在超过四分之一个世纪的时间里(1992-1993年至2019-2021年),我发现重男轻女的比例从40%显著下降到18%,而在大多数亚群体中,性别平等的偏好有所增加。多变量分析显示,在所有调查年份中,受教育程度和频繁看电视大大增加了性别平等偏好的几率。在过去十年中,支持妇女就业的社区规范也与性别平等的偏好有关。此外,分解分析表明,与构成变化相比,社会规范变化占性别平等偏好增加的三分之二。这些发现表明,在印度,不断提高的性别平等规范有可能消除性别偏见。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.00
自引率
9.50%
发文量
35
期刊介绍: Studies in Family Planning publishes public health, social science, and biomedical research concerning sexual and reproductive health, fertility, and family planning, with a primary focus on developing countries. Each issue contains original research articles, reports, a commentary, book reviews, and a data section with findings for individual countries from the Demographic and Health Surveys.
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