Chinas Race with the Gender Gap
China has rolled out new population figures, unearthingamong a host of fresh datasome revealing information on the gender gap.
According to figures released Thursday by the National Bureau of Statistics, slightly less than 51.3% of Chinas population is male, falling from just above 51.6% in the year 2000.
The new numbers can be explained partly by government efforts to fight sex-selective abortion, which, as the state-run Global Times noted in a report last year, became something of an epidemic after China introduced the one-child policy in 1980.
Although Beijing has rejected proposals to criminalize elective abortion of female fetuses, parts of China began banning the use of ultrasound to determine the sex of a fetus in the year 2000, periodically cracking down on clinics that continue to offer sex-selective abortion.
The narrowing of the gap might also have benefited from a gradual shift in favor of female children among middle class parents in larger cities, some of whom dread the expense of eventually having to pay for a sons wedding and buy him an apartment.
Even with the improved balance, however, China still boasts 34 million extra men. While that might seem advantageous from the perspective of a young female looking for a mate, its contributing to what many demographers see as population rates that are too low to sustain Chinas future economic needs.
In a 2003 paper studying the effects of Chinas missing girl problem the flip-side of the extra men problem on the countrys population growth (PDF), sociologists Cai Yong and William Lavely calculated that Chinas future population size would be reduced by almost 14% over the next century if China failed to improve the gender ratio as it stood in the year 2000. A missing girl not only does not contribute to the population total, nor will her daughter, nor her daughters daughter, the pair wrote. The reproductive potential of the missing is lost to all future generations.
Chinas gender ratio at birth in other words, the ratio of male newborns to female newborns has improved in recent years, but it is actually slightly more skewed towards male children now than it was a decade ago, according to the new census figures. That means Chinas missing girl, or extra men, problem is likely to have a major effect on the size of Chinas population above and beyond the one-child policy.
Decreased population growth was precisely what the government was aiming for when it implemented the one-child policy in 1980, but that slowing of growth now poses a threat to Chinas future economic development. According to various projections, the size of Chinas labor force has already peaked, meaning there will be fewer workers around to take care of a rapidly expanding elderly population.
For that reason, says Nankai University economist Li Jianmin, China needs to seriously rethink the one-child policy. Its bringing about major social dilemmas, said Mr. Li.
But in a country that, outside the major cities at least, still boasts a cultural preference for male children, its questionable how loosening or even eliminating the one-child rule would affect the gender gap. To truly balance Chinas population, many observers say, leaders need to find ways to raise the value of women in Chinese society.
National Statistics Bureau commissioner Ma Jiantang says the government is pushing for more equality. We have been and will continue to adopt more gender equality programs for employment and remunerations, Mr. Ma said at a press conference on the new census figures, adding that the NSB itself employs more female staff than males.
As the numbers suggest, fixing the gapand fastis not just a matter of fairness, but of future economic growth.
China
China has rolled out new population figures, unearthingamong a host of fresh datasome revealing information on the gender gap.
According to figures released Thursday by the National Bureau of Statistics, slightly less than 51.3% of Chinas population is male, falling from just above 51.6% in the year 2000.
The new numbers can be explained partly by government efforts to fight sex-selective abortion, which, as the state-run Global Times noted in a report last year, became something of an epidemic after China introduced the one-child policy in 1980.
Although Beijing has rejected proposals to criminalize elective abortion of female fetuses, parts of China began banning the use of ultrasound to determine the sex of a fetus in the year 2000, periodically cracking down on clinics that continue to offer sex-selective abortion.
The narrowing of the gap might also have benefited from a gradual shift in favor of female children among middle class parents in larger cities, some of whom dread the expense of eventually having to pay for a sons wedding and buy him an apartment.
Even with the improved balance, however, China still boasts 34 million extra men. While that might seem advantageous from the perspective of a young female looking for a mate, its contributing to what many demographers see as population rates that are too low to sustain Chinas future economic needs.
In a 2003 paper studying the effects of Chinas missing girl problem the flip-side of the extra men problem on the countrys population growth (PDF), sociologists Cai Yong and William Lavely calculated that Chinas future population size would be reduced by almost 14% over the next century if China failed to improve the gender ratio as it stood in the year 2000. A missing girl not only does not contribute to the population total, nor will her daughter, nor her daughters daughter, the pair wrote. The reproductive potential of the missing is lost to all future generations.
Chinas gender ratio at birth in other words, the ratio of male newborns to female newborns has improved in recent years, but it is actually slightly more skewed towards male children now than it was a decade ago, according to the new census figures. That means Chinas missing girl, or extra men, problem is likely to have a major effect on the size of Chinas population above and beyond the one-child policy.
Decreased population growth was precisely what the government was aiming for when it implemented the one-child policy in 1980, but that slowing of growth now poses a threat to Chinas future economic development. According to various projections, the size of Chinas labor force has already peaked, meaning there will be fewer workers around to take care of a rapidly expanding elderly population.
For that reason, says Nankai University economist Li Jianmin, China needs to seriously rethink the one-child policy. Its bringing about major social dilemmas, said Mr. Li.
But in a country that, outside the major cities at least, still boasts a cultural preference for male children, its questionable how loosening or even eliminating the one-child rule would affect the gender gap. To truly balance Chinas population, many observers say, leaders need to find ways to raise the value of women in Chinese society.
National Statistics Bureau commissioner Ma Jiantang says the government is pushing for more equality. We have been and will continue to adopt more gender equality programs for employment and remunerations, Mr. Ma said at a press conference on the new census figures, adding that the NSB itself employs more female staff than males.
As the numbers suggest, fixing the gapand fastis not just a matter of fairness, but of future economic growth.
China