Despite the 2011 census setting alarm bells ringing
about India’s worsening sex ratio, the gap between male and female
registered births in India fell further in 2012 and 2013, new official
data suggest.
India’s Civil Registration System
(CRS), administered by the office of the Registrar General of India,
which also conducts the decadal census, comprises all officially
registered birth and death data. It is mandatory to register all births
and deaths within 21 days of their occurrence.
Official
registration of these events has been improving across the country, and
in 2013, the RGI estimated that 85.5 per cent of all births are now
registered, with 17 States estimated to be registering all births, but
Bihar and Uttar Pradesh struggling with only 57.4 per cent and 68.6 per
cent registrations. “As the level of registration improves, we would
anticipate that the sex ratio also should improve, because people are
normally less likely to register female births,” a senior census
official said.
However, since 2011, when the census
found India’s child sex ratio at birth to have fallen to 910 girls for
every 1,000 boys, the situation may have worsened. Newly released CRS
data show that the sex ratio of registered births fell from 909 in 2011
to 908 the next year and 898 in 2013. Manipur and Haryana do
particularly badly, as do Uttarakhand, Tamil Nadu and Rajasthan.
There
are, demographers caution, problems with using CRS data on the sex
ratio. For one, it counts registered births only and since girls are
less likely to be officially registered than boys, the sex ratio derived
from the CRS is artificially depressed. Secondly, the RGI’s Sample
Registration System (SRS), which selects a nationally representative
sample to derive data on births and deaths, is considered to be more
rigorous than the CRS which relies on local authorities. A comparison of
the data does indicate a small difference between CRS and SRS for the
same years, and large differences at the State level between CRS and
census data. CRS data are also at times prone to wide year-on-year
variation at the State level.
However, the new CRS
data too should alert governments to the fact that India’s law against
prenatal sex determination-driven terminations is not working, activists
say. “There is a lot of resistance among doctors and in many places,
the Act is simply not being implemented,” says Dr. Sabu George, India’s
leading campaigner against sex-selective abortions.
“Moreover,
what’s happening now is that gender determination for even the first
pregnancy has started to happen,” Dr. George says. Others agree; as
families get smaller, the pressure for one of the family’s two children
to be a boy escalates.

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