New paper discusses causes and China's future
by Steven Wood
Morse takes a nuanced approach to
the problem, contending that for a society to practice sex selection; three
components must be in place: the society must have a cultural preference
for males, it must have easy access to prenatal sex-determination tests and
abortion, and it must have low fertility. If any one of these elements is
absent, the society can evade a gender imbalance; when all three are present—as
they are in China—a gender gap of noticeable proportions is sure to follow.
With the infamous one-child per
family policy, China hit the brakes on its fertility levels. Fertility
was cut in half, dropping from 2.9 children per couple to 1.6—well below the
replacement level of 2.1. And if you look at the babies that China is
having, it is hard to ignore that they are disproportionately male. Morse
has done the numbers, and finds that from the years 1990-2013, China is short
some 16 million girls. Even with the recent relaxation of the one-child
policy, it appears that the gendercide will continue as long as the government
limits fertility.
Admittedly, the UN is right in
saying that the standing of women in Chinese and other cultures needs to be
improved. In recent years, the status of China’s women has risen
remarkably. While the improved treatment of women has dulled the knife of
sex-selective abortion, it remains sharp enough to kill nearly a half million
girls in China each year. The ratio of female abortions to male abortions
is no longer growing, yet it is still much safer to be an unborn boy in China
than it is to be an unborn girl.
Morse concludes that an accurate
assessment of the problem must take into account each of the three
factors. Most especially, Morse argues that we cannot discount the
important role that fertility rates play in sex selection: “Fertility
does matter. Decreasing fertility has huge effects on sex-selective
abortions. . . . As fertility falls, the chance of having a boy decreases along
with it.” In a society where parents would rather have a son than a
daughter, any state-imposed limit on a family’s fertility can prove fatal for a
child conceived with two X chromosomes.
Morse’s study rebuts the narrow
focus of those who, like the UN and the WHO, ignore fertility and discount
prenatal gender testing when assessing the sex-selection problem. An
understanding of the problem must give equal weight to all factors, not just the
cultural status of women. Morse carefully balances the three, concluding
that although “demographic changes alone cannot solve the problem of sex
selective abortions. . . . Demography must be considered, because as
China’s total fertility declines, sex selection increases.”
Anne Morse’s study, “Sex Selection
in China and Its Demographic Causes,” is available from the Catholic Family & Human Rights Institute. It is a valuable addition to the literature on
China’s ongoing gendercide, and the light it sheds on the issue shows all the
more how state control of fertility in China is problematic.
The
pro-life Population Research Institute is dedicated to ending human rights
abuses committed in the name of "family planning," and to ending
counter-productive social and economic paradigms premised on the myth of
"overpopulation." Find us at pop.org.
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