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Published in: Demography 6/2020

Open Access 25-09-2020

Gender Discrimination and Excess Female Under-5 Mortality in India: A New Perspective Using Mixed-Sex Twins

Authors: Ridhi Kashyap, Julia Behrman

Published in: Demography | Issue 6/2020

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Abstract

Son preference has been linked to excess female under-5 mortality in India, and considerable literature has explored whether parents invest more resources in sons relative to daughters—which we refer to as explicit discrimination—leading to girls’ poorer health status and, consequently, higher mortality. However, this literature has not adequately controlled for the implicit discrimination processes that sort girls into different types of families (e.g., larger) and at earlier parities. To better address the endogeneity associated with implicit discrimination processes, we explore the association between child sex and postneonatal under-5 mortality using a sample of mixed-sex twins from four waves of the Indian National Family Health Survey. Mixed-sex twins provide a natural experiment that exogenously assigns a boy and a girl to families at the same time, thus controlling for selectivity into having an unwanted female child. We document a sizable impact of explicit discrimination on girls’ excess mortality in India, particularly compared with a placebo analysis in sub-Saharan Africa, where girls have a survival advantage. We also show that explicit discrimination weakened for birth cohorts after the mid-1990s, especially in northern India, but further weakening has stalled since the mid-2000s, thus contributing to understandings of how the micro-processes underlying the female mortality disadvantage have changed over time.

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Appendix
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Footnotes
1
The male/female ratio (hereafter, sex ratio) of infant mortality is generally higher than 1, indicative of higher mortality for males than for females. The same pattern also exists in early childhood (between ages 1 and 4 years), although sex ratios are less masculine in most populations in this age group compared with infancy (first 12 months of life). In the first year of life, newborn girls have a biological advantage over boys because of their lower vulnerability to perinatal conditions, congenital abnormalities, and certain infectious diseases, such as intestinal and lower respiratory infections (Drevenstedt et al. 2008).
 
2
Throughout the article, to be consistent with demographic convention (e.g., sex ratios, sex-specific mortality) and the variable in the National Family Health Survey (NFHS), we use sex of the child. We recognize nevertheless that the female mortality disadvantage is the product of social—rather than biological—processes related to gender-based discrimination.
 
3
Sex selection at first birth in northern India has been noted in recent work (e.g., Anukriti 2018) that challenges this assumption.
 
4
Unlike Anukriti et al. (2018), we also use the most recent wave of the NFHS-4, and our sample covers more recent births as well (i.e., after 2005).
 
5
The states included in the northern category include Bihar, Delhi, Gujarat, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Jammu and Kashmir, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Punjab, Rajasthan, and Uttar Pradesh.
 
6
ART has predominantly been associated with increased rates of dizygotic twinning. Dizygotic twins may be mixed sex or the same sex, but all monozygotic twins are the same sex (Pison et al. 2015).
 
7
We are unable to measure zygosity in the NFHS data.
 
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Metadata
Title
Gender Discrimination and Excess Female Under-5 Mortality in India: A New Perspective Using Mixed-Sex Twins
Authors
Ridhi Kashyap
Julia Behrman
Publication date
25-09-2020
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Demography / Issue 6/2020
Print ISSN: 0070-3370
Electronic ISSN: 1533-7790
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s13524-020-00909-0

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