González Libertad
Universitat Pompeu Fabra and Barcelona GSE, Department of Economics and Business, Ramon Trias Fargas 25-27, 08005 Barcelona, Spain.
Econ Hum Biol. 2018 May;29:64-75. doi: 10.1016/j.ehb.2018.02.003. Epub 2018 Feb 15.
I use birth-certificate data for Spain to document extremely son-biased sex ratios at birth among Indian immigrants (122 boys per 100 girls), especially at higher parities. I also show that the children of Indian immigrants display poor health outcomes during infancy. For instance, almost 10% of boys with Indian parents are born prematurely, compared with 6% of boys with native parents. However, there is no evidence of a gender gap in infant health among the children of Indian immigrants. I provide evidence suggesting that the poor outcomes of Indian children at birth may be attributed to the low endowments of Indian mothers, while the absence of a gender gap may be driven by the fact that the parents who would invest less in girls are less likely to carry the pregnancies of girls to term (more likely to practice sex-selective abortion), combined with the lower cost of prenatal investments in Spain (compared with India).
我利用西班牙的出生证明数据证明,印度移民的出生性别比极度偏向男孩(每100名女孩对应122名男孩),尤其是在多子女家庭中。我还表明,印度移民的子女在婴儿期健康状况不佳。例如,父母为印度人的男孩中,近10%为早产,而父母为本地人的男孩中这一比例为6%。然而,没有证据表明印度移民子女在婴儿健康方面存在性别差异。我提供的证据表明,印度儿童出生时的不良状况可能归因于印度母亲的禀赋较低,而不存在性别差异可能是由于那些对女孩投资较少的父母让女孩足月妊娠的可能性较小(更有可能进行性别选择性堕胎),再加上在西班牙进行产前检查的成本较低(与印度相比)。