For years, South Korea presented the
puzzling phenomenon of steeply rising sex ratios at birth
despite rapid development, including in women's
education and formal employment. This paper shows that son
preference decreased in response to development...
Show More
For years, South Korea presented the
puzzling phenomenon of steeply rising sex ratios at birth
despite rapid development, including in women's
education and formal employment. This paper shows that son
preference decreased in response to development, but its
manifestation continued until the mid-1990s due to improved
sex-selection technology. The paper analyzes unusually rich
survey data, and finds that the impact of development worked
largely through triggering normative changes across the
whole society - rather than just through changes in
individuals as their socio-economic circumstances changed.
The findings show that nearly three-quarters of the decline
in son preference between 1991 and 2003 is attributable to
normative change, and the rest to increases in the
proportions of urban and educated people. South Korea is
now the first Asian country to reverse the trend in rising
sex ratios at birth. The paper discusses the cultural
underpinnings of son preference in pre-industrial Korea, and
how these were unraveled by industrialization and
urbanization, while being buttressed by public policies
upholding the patriarchal family system. Finally, the
authors hypothesize that child sex ratios in China and India
will decline well before they reach South Korean levels of
development, since they have vigorous programs to accelerate
normative change to reduce son preference.
Show Less
| Author | Chung, Woojin; Das Gupta, Monica; |
| Document Date | 2007/10/01 |
| Document Type | Policy Research Working Paper |
| Report Number | WPS4373 |
| Volume No | 1 of 1 |
| Country | China India Korea, Republic of |
| Doc Name | Why is son preference declining in South Korea ? the role of development and public policy, and the implications for China and India |
| Keywords | Abortion, age at marriage, aging, allocation of resources, birth order, borrowing, censuses, changes in population composit... Abortion, age at marriage, aging, allocation of resources, birth order, borrowing, censuses, changes in population composition, Child Mortality, Child Survival, childbearing, citizen, citizens, concubine, Constitutional Court, court, Cultural Change, cultural factors, democracy, demographic Analysis, demographic trends, descent, developing countries, Development Policy, disabled, discrimination, divorce, economic characteristics, economic development, economic opportunities, economic status, educated women, education levels, educational level, Elementary school, employment of women, employment status, equal rights, expenditures, families, Family Health, Family Law, family members, Family Planning, family roles, family size, fashion, father, female, female children, female education, female infanticide, Female Labor, Female Labor force, Female Labor force participation, female life expectancy, fertility, fertility attitudes, fertility behavior, Fertility Control, fertility decline, Fertility levels, Fertility Rate, fertility survey, Fertility Transition, fertility transitions, fertility trends, financial support, formal education, gender, Gender bias, gender equality, gender equity, Gender Imbalance, gender inequalities, gender relations, girl child, girls, grassroots women, head of the family, households, housing loans, Human Development, Human Resources, husband, husbands, ideas about gender roles, industrialization, Infant, infant mortality, inheritance, Insurance, International Bank, kept women, kinship, labor force, labor force participation, labor market, labor markets, large cities, laws, legislation, level of education, levels of education, live birth, male lineages, marginalization, marriages, married women, masculinity, mass media, media campaigns, migration, Ministry of Health, modernization, mortality rates, mother, Mothers, national development, National Fertility, national resources, number of births, number of children, number of people, Old Age, older women, patriarchy, pension, pensions, personal communication, place of residence, Policy ReseaRch, Policy ReseaRch WoRking PaPeR, political power, Population and Development, Population Association, population control, population groups, Population Research, Population Research Center, Population Statistics, Population Studies, Preference for Sons, prenatal sex selection, progress, proportion of women, psychological changes, Public Health, public life, Public Policy, public schools, Public Services, public sphere, resource allocation, respect, rural areas, Rural residence, rural residents, sanctions, savings, school enrolment, sex, Sex Bias, Sex Preference, Sex Preferences, sex ratio, sex ratios, Social Affairs, social change, social changes, social development, social institutions, social norms, social science, social services, social status, social support, social welfare, societal norms, Son Preference, State policies, trade union, traditional family, traditional values, unborn children, uneducated women, urban areas, urban social networks, urbanization, village, villages, wage differentials, Wage discrimination, war, Western Europe, widow, widows, wife, will, wives, woman, World Health Organization, young couples |
| Language | English; |
| Region | South Asia; East Asia and Pacific; |
| Rep Title | Why is son preference declining in South Korea ? the role of development and public policy, and the implications for China and India |
| Topics | Gender; Health, Nutrition and Population; Finance and Financial Sector Development; |
| SubTopics | Access to Finance; Gender and Health; Population Policies; Gender and Law; Gender and Development; |
| Unit Owning | Development Research Group (DECRG) |
| Collection Title | Policy Research working paper ; no. WPS 4373 |
Official version of document (may contain signatures, etc)
*The text version is uncorrected OCR text and is included solely to benefit users with slow connectivity.