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Baluarte
05-02-2013, 12:34 PM
Sex imbalances at birth threaten Armenia’s demography: “missing” women, decreasing population, marriage problems

Today, UNFPA Armenia Country Office held a press conference and a following conference to present the findings of the 2012-2013 “Sex Imbalances at Birth in Armenia: Demographic Evidence and Analysis” study findings. The purpose of the study was an in-depth analysis of sex-at-birth imbalances in Armenia and projecting the possible consequences of the skewed sex ratio for the country. The study was conducted by Christophe Z Guilmoto, senior fellow at the French Institut de recherche pour le development (IRD, Research Institute for Development) based at CEPED in Paris and a leading expert on the issue of prenatal sex selection, at the request of UNFPA Armenia Country Office.

Dr. Guilmoto, together with Dr. Zahidul Huque, UNFPA Representative for Turkey and Country Director for Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia, and Mr. Garik Hayrapetyan, UNFPA Armenia Assistant Representative spoke at the press conference. As the speakers indicated, the sex ratio at birth in Armenia rose after early 90s and today remains at a very high level of 114-115 of male births per 100 female births. This corresponds to one of the highest levels of birth masculinity observed anywhere in the world, surpassed only by China (118) and Azerbaijan (116).

According to the study, if the adverse practice of preventing girls from being born for the sake of having a boy is continued, almost 93,000 women will “go missing” and Armenia’s population will reduce by additional 80,000 inhabitants (it corresponds to the annual number of births over two years) by 2060, constituting, ceteris paribus, 2.60 million.

As the speakers noted, in Armenia, male children born after 1996 already outnumber female children by almost 39,000. “If we fail to prevent this process, part of men of the most active age in terms of entering marriage, 20-39 year olds, will relatively soon face problems, and being unable to find a pair will be forced either to migrate or to look for wives from abroad”, said Garik Hayrapetyan.

The press conference was followed by a conference, where the representatives of different stakeholders were greeted by Mr. Arayik Petrosyan, First Deputy Minister of Labor and Social Issues, and Dr. Huque.

At the conference, Dr. Guilmoto presented the study findings in deeper detail. In addition, a number of presentations were made shedding light on the phenomenon of sex imbalances at birth from a variety of perspectives including those of demographic, health, social, and gender equality.

UNFPA, the United Nations Population Fund, is an international development agency that delivers a world where every pregnancy is wanted, every birth is safe, every young person's potential is fulfilled.

Loki
05-02-2013, 12:45 PM
This is an interesting point. It sometimes seems as if male ratios become inflated during peacetime ... because males are more expendable during wartime. Wars usually correct this imbalance.

Grizzly
05-02-2013, 01:10 PM
This is an interesting point. It sometimes seems as if male ratios become inflated during peacetime ... because males are more expendable during wartime. Wars usually correct this imbalance.

Didn't read the article but it's more due to the fact families would rather have a male child instead a female child which they see as a "burden".

Loki
05-02-2013, 01:19 PM
Didn't read the article but it's more due to the fact families would rather have a male child instead a female child which they see as a "burden".

Sounds like China. They don't value female babies there.

Baluarte
05-02-2013, 10:41 PM
Sounds like China. They don't value female babies there.

Quite a backwardish point of view if I may say so. It is true that in the Old days, having a son was better seen as he would carry on the name, have the right to inherit his family's land and perhaps represent it in the public sphere (army/church/administration).

But with the invention of ecographies and abortion, it has completely degenerated into mysoginistic murder.

Musso
05-03-2013, 04:01 AM
Selective abortion can be a problem and when families have few children, they will prefer son over daughter usually. I'm personally against abortion except in cases of rape/threat to mother's life. Selective abortion is one of the worst things a prospective family can do.

Anglojew
05-03-2013, 04:08 AM
This is an interesting point. It sometimes seems as if male ratios become inflated during peacetime ... because males are more expendable during wartime. Wars usually correct this imbalance.

Sounds like both Armenia and Azerbijian are subconsciously gearing up for another war in about 10 years.