Nearly 5M fewer girls to be born worldwide in next 10 years from RTE
Population Control

Nearly 5M fewer girls to be born worldwide in next 10 years

Aug 3, 2021, 9:13 AM
Rose De La Cruz

Rose De La Cruz

Writer/Columnist

Sex-selective practices could undermine social cohesion in the long term with the projected shortfall in the number of girls being born leading to a surplus of young men in about a third of the global population by 2030, which could lead to increased anti-social behavior and violence.

Because of cultural preference for male offspring in some countries, there would be 4.7 million fewer girls to be born globally in the next 10 years, according to a research published in the BMJ medical journal.

Such sex-selective practices could undermine social cohesion in the long term with the projected shortfall in the number of girls being born leading to a surplus of young men in about a third of the global population by 2030, which could lead to increased anti-social behavior and violence.

Sex-selective abortions have been on the rise for the past 40 years in countries throughout southeast Europe along with south and east Asia, with as-yet undetermined demographic impacts.

To model what short- and long-term effect sex selection will have on societies, an international team of researchers analyzed data from more than 3 billion births over the last 50 years, according to the research published by the AFP.

Scenarios

Focusing on 12 countries where the male-to-female ratio had increased since 1970 and another 17 where that ratio was at risk of increasing due to social or cultural trends, they simulated two scenarios.

The first assumed an increase in the rate of sex selection, based on statistical evidence.

The second scenario assumed increased sex selection in certain countries, based on observed trends and decreased fertility, but for which specific data were lacking.

In scenario 1, countries saw a shortfall of 4.7 million in the number of girls being born by 2030. For scenario 2, the figure jumped to more than 22 million globally by 2100.

‘Marriage squeeze’

Authors of the research, published in the BMJ medical journal, said the bias towards male offspring could lead to a "marriage squeeze" in affected countries.

"Fewer-than-expected females in a population could result in elevated levels of anti-social behavior and violence and may ultimately affect long-term stability and social sustainable development," they wrote.

Harmful practices

The United Nations defines sex-selective practices alongside child marriage and female genital mutilation as harmful practices targeted under the Millennium Development Goals.

The authors of the new study called for better data collection of such practices to stamp them out, as well as wider education initiatives.

"A broader objective relates to the need to influence gender norms which lie at the core of harmful practices such as prenatal sex selection," they wrote.

"This calls for broader legal frameworks to ensure gender equality."

Tags: #globalpopulation, #culturalpreferences, #sexselection, #abortions


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