Female-Male Ratio (FMR)
India is known to be one of the few countries
with a female-male ratio (FMR : females per 1000 males; or sex ratio/SR) that
has continued to be adverse to women. The disadvantages surrounding Indian
women's capacity to survive that leads to this imbalance, are rooted in a
complex web of socio-cultural factors . While gender-based
differentials in mortality are seen by some as the main cause behind low
FMRs, others have traced the roots of these differentials to an ethos of
discrimination against women, which is manifested in their unequal access to
life supporting resources such as food, nutrition and health care, specially
during childhood . [i] Widespread gender-biased
practices thus serve to distort the FMRs among child populations of various ages
, finally culminating in the male dominant
FMR of our population .
Table D 6 shows the trends in the general and child sex ratios (CSR : pertaining to the age group 0-6 years) for West Bengal, India and selected states Historically the West Bengal FMR has been adverse for women to a greater extent as compared to the all-India situation but there has also been a secular rise in the state's FMR so that it is now marginally above the all-India FMR. During 1991-2001 West Bengal recorded the fourth largest gain in the FMR/SR , rising from 917 to 934 while the all-India FMR/SR showed a comparatively small gain from 927 to 933. Kerala remains the only state with an SR that is well above 1000. These trends are illustrated in the preceding Chart D I.According to the 1991 census the SR for Scheduled Tribe (ST) population in West Bengal stood at 964 ( as compared to 972 for all-India) and that for Scheduled Caste (SC) population was 931 (vis-à-vis 922 for all-India). District-wise SRs as well as CSRs will be found in Appendix Table AD 1, which provides detailed demographic profiles for each of the districts of West Bengal.
Child Sex Ratio
Child sex ratios are recognised to be a better
indicator of women's position , because it is very unlikely that they would be
vitiated by sex-selective migration trends. In a population unaffected by bias
against girl children ( as evident
, for example in female infanticide and foeticide) ,
the CSR would favour girls since girls are endowed by nature to be
the stronger sex . This indeed was true of West Bengal till 1971. It is a
cause for grave concern that that in West Bengal the SR for children aged up to
six years has declined from 1007 in 1971 to 963 in 2001 : " the imbalance
that has set in at this early age
group is difficult to be removed and would remain to haunt the population for a
long time to come".[i]
Ashis Bose would like to coin the acronym BIMARU, "where D stands for
daughters and MARU stands for killing " and on the basis of a statistical
cut-off level of 50 points decline in CSR between 1991 and 2001, this
marker would apply to Punjab, Haryana , Himachal Pradesh , Madhya Pradesh
and Gujarat. [ii]For
West Bengal, however, the fall in the CSR (0-6 years) at minus 4 per cent was
relatively negligible, as shown in Table D 6. Analysts have drawn attention to
two possible factors behind the falling CSRs : the SR at birth (SRB : male live births per 1000 female live
births) has become more biased
against females due to the
continuing pressure of son preference and secondly, the female age-specific
death rates (ASDR) for the age groups 0-4 years and 5-9 years have been found to
be higher than the corresponding male rates. In West Bengal, for example,
mortality rates for boys and girls in the first group were 18.1 and 18.7
respectively and in the second age group, 1.7 and 2.1 respectively in 1994.,
pointing to the neglect/deprivation faced by the girl child [iii];
again, the Sample Registration System(SRS) under the Census of India (COI)
estimated the West Bengal and India
SRBs at 105.6 and 109.5 respectively in 1991.
Table
D 6: |
Trends
in Sex Ratio (SR) and Child Sex Ratio (CSR) for West Bengal
India and selected states |
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|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Sex Ratio (SR) |
|
Child
Sex Ratio (CSR) Age 0-6 years |
||||
|
|
|
|
|
change |
|
|
change |
|
1951 |
1971 |
1991 |
2001 |
1991-2001 |
1991 |
2001 |
1991-2001 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Bihar |
1054 |
954 |
907 |
921 |
14 |
953 |
938 |
-15 |
Gujarat |
952 |
934 |
934 |
921 |
-13 |
928 |
878 |
-50 |
Karnataka |
966 |
957 |
960 |
964 |
4 |
960 |
949 |
-11 |
Kerala |
1028 |
1016 |
1036 |
1058 |
22 |
958 |
963 |
5 |
Maharashtra |
941 |
930 |
934 |
922 |
-12 |
946 |
917 |
-29 |
Mizoram |
1041 |
946 |
958 |
878 |
20 |
969 |
971 |
2 |
Orissa |
1022 |
988 |
971 |
972 |
1 |
967 |
950 |
-17 |
Punjab |
844 |
865 |
882 |
874 |
-8 |
875 |
793 |
-82 |
Tamil
Nadu |
921 |
911 |
974 |
986 |
12 |
948 |
939 |
-9 |
Rajasthan |
1007 |
978 |
910 |
922 |
12 |
916 |
909 |
-7 |
Uttar
Pradesh |
910 |
879 |
879 |
898 |
22 |
927 |
916 |
-11 |
W.
Bengal |
865 |
891 |
917 |
934 |
17 |
967 |
963 |
-4 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
All-India |
946 |
930 |
927 |
933 |
6 |
945 |
927 |
-18 |
Source : K.Srinivasan, "Sex Ratios : What
They Hide and What They Reveal", EPW, 17-24 December 1994, Table 1 and
Mahendra K.Premi, "The Missing Girl Child", EPW, 26 May 2001, Table 2.
[i] Satish Balram Agnihotri, Sex Ratio Patterns in the Indian Population : A Fresh Exploration, New Delhi 2000, p. 33.