Female Early Marriage and Son Preference in Pakistan

IF 1.8 3区 经济学 Q3 DEVELOPMENT STUDIES Journal of Development Studies Pub Date : 2023-06-07 DOI:10.1080/00220388.2023.2217997
Mazhar Mughal, Rashid Javed, Thierry Lorey
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Abstract

In this study, we employ pooled data from four rounds of Pakistan Demographic and Health Survey (PDHS) to examine whether, and to what extent, does the incidence of early marriage shape the married women’s perspectives on gender preference associated with reproduction. We employ a number of econometric techniques (Probit, OLS, Cox Hazard Model, IV Probit and treatment effects) and a large set of model specifications, and find significant evidence supporting the role of early marriage in perpetuating disproportionate preference for boys. Women who married before turning 18 not only state a greater desire for boys but are also less likely to stop reproduction as long as they do not have a boy. Early-age marriage is associated with 7.7–12.5 per cent higher incidence of fertility discontinuation among women without a son. This son-preferring behaviour is stronger at higher birth order and also reflects in differential spacing patterns. Women’s education appears to be the strongest channel through which these effects are mediated. The divergence between early- and late-marrying women appears to have sharpened over time. The findings of this study underscore the role played by early marriage in altering the gender-specific attitudes prevalent in the society, and highlight existing gender inequality traps.
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巴基斯坦女性早婚与重男轻女
在这项研究中,我们使用了四轮巴基斯坦人口与健康调查(PDHS)的汇总数据来研究早婚的发生率是否以及在多大程度上影响了已婚妇女对与生殖相关的性别偏好的看法。我们采用了大量的计量经济学技术(Probit、OLS、Cox Hazard Model、IV Probit和治疗效果)和大量的模型规格,并发现了支持早婚在延续不成比例的男孩偏好中所起作用的重要证据。在18岁之前结婚的女性不仅更想要男孩,而且只要没有男孩,她们就不太可能停止生育。在没有儿子的妇女中,早婚导致中止生育的发生率高出7.7%至12.5%。这种重男轻女的行为在较高的出生顺序中更为强烈,也反映在不同的出生间隔模式中。妇女的教育似乎是调解这些影响的最强有力的渠道。随着时间的推移,早婚和晚婚女性之间的差异似乎越来越大。这项研究的结果强调了早婚在改变社会中普遍存在的性别观念方面所起的作用,并强调了现有的性别不平等陷阱。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.20
自引率
3.40%
发文量
138
期刊介绍: The Journal of Development Studies was the first and is one of the best known international journals in the area of development studies. Since its foundation in 1964, it has published many seminal articles on development and opened up new areas of debate. Priority is given to papers which are: • relevant to important current research in development policy, theory and analysis • make a novel and significant contribution to the field • provide critical tests, based on empirical work, of alternative theories, perspectives or schools of thought We invite articles that are interdisciplinary or focused on particular disciplines (e.g. economics, politics, geography, sociology or anthropology), with an expectation that all work is accessible to readers across the social sciences. The editors also welcome surveys of the literature in important fields of development policy. All research articles in this journal undergo rigorous peer review, based on initial editor screening and anonymous peer review. Given the high level of submissions, a majority of submissions are rejected quickly with reasons.
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