A gender deficit that could haunt us for decades

By Kate Darnto


I would like to know the sex of my unborn child. In America, that’s a straightforward procedure: When you’re around 20 weeks pregnant, you go to your obstetrician’s office, where an ultrasound technician squirts a puddle of cold jelly on your belly, skates a transducer probe over the top, and tells you if she can spot a willy or not.
In India, it’s more complicated. For starters, it’s illegal.
According to a 1994 law meant to discourage parents from aborting baby girls, any doctor who identifies the sex of a fetus will be struck off the medical register and face a hefty fine and up to three years in
prison. A pregnant woman who undergoes tests to detect the sex of a fetus risks imprisonment and fines, too.
On my first visit with my new OB, a stern lady clad in a dark blue sari, I offered a big smile and asked whether I — you know, openminded American that I am — might be able to find out the sex of my child. “Sure,” she smirked. “If you fly to Singapore.” There are ultrasound shops all over Delhi, where I live. Many would be indistinguishable from the other bodegas in the local markets except for the legally mandated
signs that declare, “Here prenatal sex determination (boy or girl before birth) is not done. It is a punishable act.” Long lines of pregnant ladies wait outside.When you go in, you don’t have to fill out
an insurance form, but you do have to sign a form that states, “I do not want to know the sex of my fetus.” You must also write down the number of children you already have and the sex of each child.
Well, there go my chances, I thought. I already have two daughters. What ultrasound technician would tell me that I’m facing what in Delhi is a maternity nightmare: a third girl child?
Turns out, a lot of them. Activists estimate that sex selection is a Rs 500 million business in India. If you’re willing to pay, you can find out the sex of your baby. You just go to the right clinic. The ultrasound
technician will respond in code. “Celebrate with sweets,”he might say, meaning that a son is on the way.
The market for ultrasound equipment in
India is vast and growing, and manufacturers have moved aggressively to satisfy it.
The latest models are so cheap and portable, a sonographer can throw one in his trunk and drive out to rural areas to scan the villagers at about Rs 500 a pop. Cheap ultrasounds help explain the persistent
gender imbalance plaguing India.
The British medical journal ‘The Lancet’ reported in 2006 that over the last 20 years there have been 10 million missing female births in India. That’s half a million girls per year. In some parts of India, fewer than
800 girls are born for every 1,000 boys.
Some of India’s wealthiest areas, such as Punjab, suffer the worst sex ratios.
Smaller families According to activist Sabu George, the most educated families tend to have the least number of children. And “smaller families come at the expense of girls.”If parents are going to max out at one or two kids, they’ll make sure they get a son. But why the desperation for baby boys? First of all, men earn more. Also, India has no universal pension system; sons are expected to provide for their aging parents. Under
India’s inheritance practices, sons inherit the family business and the family wealth. By contrast, daughters are money pits. Girl children require extra protection, cost extra money, and eat the family food, only
to be given away to another family when they marry. The cost of that wedding is traditionally borne by the bride’s family. And then there’s the dowry — the money that a bride’s parents must pay the new in-laws.
Among the wealthy and educated, this might be enough cash to start a business or buy a car or an apartment. Among the less educated, it might be cattle, jewellery, household appliances.
I heard about a popular old advertisement: “Spend Rs 500 now and save Rs 50,000 later.” Translation: The typical ultrasound costs around Rs 500, but a dowry will run you Rs 50,000. Illegal though gender-selective abortions may be, there is a network of OBs willing to perform them. Or you perform the abortion at home.
All this cheap new technology (high-tech ultrasounds, chemical abortions) mixed with old customs means a gender deficit that could haunt India for decades. Certain areas of
northern India such as Punjab and Haryana have seen a growth in bride trafficking. Farmers from Punjab may travel as far as Kerala in southern India to find their brides.
In the United States, we may be seeing the opposite trend. Writer Hanna Rosin has pointed out that Americans who use hightech biology to try to pick a baby’s sex ask more often for girls than for boys. Rosin ties this to the rise of a modern, postindustrial economy that is “simply more congenial”to women than to men.
So maybe there’s hope for girls in India?
As the Indian economy hurtles forward, isn’t it inevitable that more women will enter the workforce in higher-paying jobs, proving that they, too, should be valued?
http://www.selco-india.com

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