India counts 1.21 billion people amid gender imbalance

Census data counts 1.21 billion Indians, with a gender imbalance that is at its worst since independence.


Afp March 31, 2011
India counts 1.21 billion people amid gender imbalance

NEW DEHLI: India's chronic gender imbalance is at its worst since independence, census data counting 1.21 billion Indians revealed Thursday, as the nation's cultural preference for male children continues to shape the population.

Provisional census figures said the population jumped to 1.21 billion in 2011 from 1.02 billion in 2001, making it more populous than Indonesia, the United States, Brazil, Pakistan and Bangladesh combined.

The child sex ratio in the country declined to 914 females to 1,000 males, the lowest figures since 1947, the data recorded.

Sex selective abortion based on ultrasound scans is illegal in India, but mothers come under huge pressure to produce male heirs who are seen as wage-earners and future family leaders.

Equality campaigners say the imbalance is due in part to unwanted daughters, who are often considered financial burdens, being neglected after birth.

The issue of "gendercide" is one of the most contentious social problems in Asia, where the United Nations says millions of women are effectively missing from the population.

India started its 2011 census in April last year, with 2.5 million officials travelling across the nation to reach more than 600,000 villages and 7,000 towns and cities.

Final census figures are expected to be released later this year.

Last month China said that its population -- already the world's largest -- increased by 6.3 million last year to hit 1.341 billion by the end of 2010.

 

COMMENTS (7)

John | 13 years ago | Reply Would not be surprised if the skewed ratio is in the rural rather than urban areas arguing against selective gender abortion. Such procedures are too small to have an impact in larger scale. Education is the key and where India was 60 years ago it is not bad in case of sex ratio. Targeted education will be the focus after the census. When there was imbalance to start with one can not expect same ratio in 60 years. I was looking at the 1890 census done in British Raj. Sex I'm balance was prevalent at that time also.
G. Din | 13 years ago | Reply @Jadoon: "...If it is still the same old prejudiced thinking about gender selection, then 74 per cent education rate does not mean much...." Well, you are right - partly! This problem is local in the two northern states as pointed out by Tony Singh. The upshot in this is that the much improved literacy figures are precisely because women outscore men in this area. India shall grow out of gender discrimination, but as in everything we take a little longer.
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