Son targeting fertility behavior: Some consequences and determinants

Author:

Basu Deepankar1,De Jong Robert2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Economics, University of Massachusetts Amherst, 1012 Thompson Hall, Amherst, MA 01003

2. Department of Economics, Ohio State University

Abstract

Abstract This article draws out some implications of son targeting fertility behavior and studies its determinants. We demonstrate that such behavior has two notable implications at the aggregate level: (a) girls have a larger number of siblings (sibling effect), and (b) girls are born at relatively earlier parities within families (birth-order effect). Empirically testing for these effects, we find that both are present in many countries in South Asia, Southeast Asia, and North Africa but are absent in the countries of sub-Saharan Africa. Using maximum likelihood estimation, we study the effect of covariates on son targeting fertility behavior in India, a country that displays significant sibling and birth-order effects. We find that income and geographic location of families significantly affect son targeting behavior.

Publisher

Duke University Press

Subject

Demography

Reference12 articles.

1. Son Preference, the Family-Building Process and Child Mortality in India;Arnold;Population Studies,1998

2. India’s Missing Girls: Biology, Customs, and Economic Development;Bhaskar;Oxford Review of Economic Policy,2007

3. Son Preference and Sex Composition of Children: Evidence From India;Clark;Demography,2000

4. Parity Progression in Australia: What Role Does Sex of Existing Children Play?;Gray;Australian Journal of Social Sciences,2005

5. Abnormal Sex Ratios in Human Populations: Causes and Consequences;Hesketh;Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America,2006

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