By Eric Baculinao
And the sobering answer is that this vast nation, now the world's fastest-growing economy, is confronting a self-perpetuated demographic disaster that some experts describe as "gendercide" -- the phenomenon caused by millions of families resorting to abortion and infanticide to make sure their one child was a boy.
The age-old bias for boys, combined with China's draconian one-child policy imposed since 1980, has produced what Gu Baochang, a leading Chinese expert on family planning, described as "the largest, the highest, and the longest" gender imbalance in the world.
Ancient
practice
For centuries, Chinese families without sons feared poverty and neglect.
The male offspring represented continuity of lineage and protection in old
age.
The traditional thinking is best described in the ancient "Book of Songs" (1000-700 B.C.):
"When a
son is born,
Let him sleep on the bed,
Clothe him with fine clothes,
And give him jade to play...
When a daughter is born,
Let her sleep on the ground,
Wrap her in common wrappings,
And give broken tiles to play..."
After the Communists took power in 1949, Mao Zedong rejected traditional Malthusian arguments that population growth would eventually outrun food supply, and firmly regarded China's huge population as an asset, then with an annual birth rate of 3.7 percent. Without a state-mandated birth control program, China's sex ratio in the 60's and 70's remained normal.
Then in the early '80s, China began enforcing an ambitious demographic engineering policy to limit families to one-child, as part of its strategy to fast-track economic modernization. The policy resulted in a slashed annual birth rate of 1.29 percent by 2002, or the prevention of some 300 million births, and the current population of close to 1.3 billion.
‘Missing
girls’
From a relatively normal ratio of 108.5 boys to 100 girls in the early
80s, the male surplus progressively rose to 111 in 1990, 116 in 2000, and is
now is close to 120 boys for each 100 girls at the present time, according to
a Chinese think-tank report.
The shortage of women is creating a "huge societal issue,” warned U.N. resident coordinator Khalid Malik earlier this year.
Along with
HIV/AIDS and environmental degradation, he said it was one of the three
biggest challenges facing China.
"In eight to 10 years, we will have something like 40 to 60 million
missing women," he said, adding that it will have "enormous
implications" for China's prostitution industry and human trafficking.
China's own population experts have been warning for years about the looming gender crisis.
"The loss of female births due to illegal prenatal sex determination and sex-selective abortions and female infanticide will affect the true sex ratio at birth and at young ages, creating an unbalanced population sex structure in the future and resulting in potentially serious social problems," argued Peking University's chief demographer back in 1993.
Prenatal sex
selection
The abortion of female fetuses and infanticide was aided by the spread of
cheap and portable ultra-sound scanners in the 1980's. Illegal mobile scanning
and backstreet hospitals can provide a sex scan for as little as $50,
according to one report.
"Prenatal sex selection was probably the primary cause, if not the sole cause, for the continuous rise of the sex ratio at birth," said population expert Prof. Chu Junhong.
A slew of reports have confirmed the disturbing demographic trend.
Gravity of
imbalance beginning to be felt
The hint of "serious" problems ahead can be seen in the
increasing cases of human trafficking as bachelors try to
"purchase" their wives.
China's police have freed more than 42,000 kidnapped women and children from 2001 to 2003.
The vast army of surplus males could pose a threat to China's stability, argued two Western scholars. Valerie M. Hudson and Andrea M. Den Boer, who recently wrote a book on the "Security Implications of Asia's Surplus Male Population," cited two rebellions in disproportionately male areas in Manchu Dynasty China.
According to their analysis, low-status young adult men with little chance of forming families of their own are "much more prone to attempt to improve their situation through violent and criminal behavior in a strategy of coalitional aggression."
The growing crime rate in China which is being linked to China's massive "floating" or transient population, some 80 million of which are low-status males, seems to add weight to their observation.
Girl Care
Project
The imbalance has spurred some official efforts to shift public opinion.
The "Girl Care Project" is described as a multi-pronged approach to encourage the birth of girls, although some experts complain that it's being framed in terms of the future needs of men.
"That's too male-oriented and discriminatory of women," said Dr. Gu, the population control expert.
According to one estimate, over the next decade, some 40 million Chinese men will be unable to find wives due to the "scarcity" of females, thus the growing number of so-called "bachelors' villages" in various parts of China.
"This project ought to be seen as a way to foster more respect and concern for women and girls," Gu said.
The program aims to end pre-birth sex selection, as well as "attacking the criminal activities of drowning and abandoning baby girls [while] rewarding and assisting families that plan to give birth to baby girls," The People's Daily, China's leading paper and the flagship of the Communist Party, reported.
Benefits
for girls
The pilot program is being launched in more than a dozen of China's
poorest provinces, with funding split between the national and local
government.
Leading the way is Fujian province where some $24 million has been allocated for distribution among nearly half a million households, with some 100,000 girls to be exempt from school fees.
Under the
program, couples who limit themselves to two girls would receive a combined
annual pension of about $150 for the rest of their lives. Preferential
treatment in health care, housing and employment would also be provided.
A recent glowing report in the The People's Daily cited a village where new
houses for beneficiaries worth more than $2,300 each were built along a
"Family Planning Basic Policy Street.”
China's birth control policy is now "a diversified mechanism," according to Population Vice-Minister Zhao Baige, which allows for one-child in the cities, two in the rural areas, and three in ethnic regions, with no limit in Tibet. "To normalize the sex ratio, illegal sex determination and sex-selective abortions must be strictly banned," Zhao declared recently.
An American demographer who has been closely following China's population program and who spoke on condition of anonymity lauded China's "coming to grips" with the problem of "missing girls.”
"Still, they are in a deep dilemma -- emotional and policy dilemma -- because the solution to the problem will conflict with other parts of their population strategy to reduce birth rate or some of the measures could perhaps make the problem even worse," warned the demographer.
"We still have a lot of work to do," said Dr.Gu. "There's no road map yet on how to achieve the goal of normal sex ratio."
URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/5953508/
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