Pink-Color Economic Survey 2017-18 Highlights Gender
Issues Against Backdrop of Development Beti Bachao, Beti
Padhao; Sukanya Samridhi Yojana and Mandatory Maternity
Leave are all Steps in Right Direction, Acknowledges Survey
The Pink-color Economic Survey
2017-18 tabled in Parliament by the Union Minister for Finance and Corporate Affairs,
Arun Jaitley lays special emphasis on Gender and Son meta-preference,
while providing an assessment of India’s performance on gender outcomes relative
to other economies.
The Survey takes into account
that Gender equality is an inherently multi-dimensional issue. Accordingly, assessments
have been made based on three specific dimensions of gender, ie Agency (relates to women’s ability to make decisions on reproduction,
spending on themselves, spending on their households and their own mobility and
health), Attitudes (relate to attitudes about violence against women/wives, and
the ideal number of daughters preferred relative to the ideal number of sons) and
Outcomes (relate to ‘son preference’ measured by sex ratio of last child, female
employment, choice of contraception, education level, age at marriage, age at first
birth and physical or sexual violence experienced by women) which aim to reflect
the status, role and empowerment of women in the society.
The key findings of the assessment
made in the Survey include: Over the last 10-15 years, India’s performance improved
on 14 out of 17 indicators of women’s agency, attitudes, and outcomes. On seven
of them, the improvement has been such that India’s situation is comparable to that
of a cohort of countries after accounting for levels of development.
The Survey encouragingly notes
that gender outcomes exhibit a convergence pattern, improving with wealth to a greater
extent in India than in similar countries so that even where it is lagging, it can
expect to catch up over time. The Survey, however, cautions that on several other
indicators, notably employment, use of reversible contraception, and son preference,
India has some distance to traverse because development has not proved to be an
antidote.
Economic Survey 2017-18 states
that within India, there is significant heterogeneity, with the North-Eastern states
(a model for the rest of the country) consistently out-performing others and not
because they are richer; hinterland states are lagging behind but the surprise is
that some southern states do less well than their development levels would suggest.
The Economic Survey 2017-18
notes the challenge of gender is long-standing, probably going back millennia, so
all stakeholders are collectively responsible for its resolution.
The Survey thus recommends that
India must confront the societal preference, even meta-preference for a son, which
appears inoculated to development. The skewed sex ratio in favor of males led to
the identification of “missing” women. But there may be a meta-preference manifesting
itself in fertility stopping rules contingent on the sex of the last child, which
notionally creates “unwanted” girls, estimated at about 21 million, adds the Survey.
Consigning these odious categories to history soon should be society’s objective,
opines the Survey.
The survey acknowledges that
government’s Beti Bachao, Beti Padhao and Sukanya Samridhi Yojanaschemes, and mandatory maternity leave rules are all steps
in the right direction. The Survey states that just as India has committed to moving
up the ranks in Ease of Doing Business indicators, a similar commitment should be
endeavored on the gender front.