Eastern Eye (UK)

More girls than boys for first time in India’s history

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INDIA has more women than men for the first time on record, according to government data that also showed a slowing birth rate in the world’s second-most populous nation.

Parents in India have historical­ly favoured sons over daughters, who are often considered burdensome and costly due to the tradition of wedding dowries.

Sex-selective abortions have been outlawed but the practice has persisted, and national population data has consistent­ly recorded one of the world’s highest ratios of men to women.

But the latest National Family and Health Survey, released by the health ministry, recorded 1,020 women per 1,000 men after two years of research.

This is the first time any significan­t government population survey has shown more women than men in India, dating back to the first national census in 1876.

“The improvemen­t in total sex ratio is positive and a step in the right direction but much still needs to be done towards gender equality,” said Sanghamitr­a Singh, Population Foundation of India (PFI) health scientist.

The difference is explained by women’s longer life expectancy, with more boys still being born than girls – 1,000 males for every 929 females.

“That could indicate some degree of son preference,” Singh said of the figures.

The data also showed India’s fertility rate had fallen to two children per woman, down from 2.2 in the last survey from 2015-16.

That figure is below the replacemen­t level needed to maintain India’s population levels, which PFI hailed as a “significan­t feat for the country’s family-planning programme”.

India is home to around 1.3 billion people and UN projection­s forecast the country’s population to overtake China later this decade.

The survey’s data was drawn from around 600,000 households across India.

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