Pong S L
Population Research Institute, Pennsylvania State University, University Park 16802.
Stud Fam Plann. 1994 May-Jun;25(3):137-48.
This study uses data from the Second Malaysian Family Life Survey, conducted in 1988, to examine parents' preferences for the sex of their children within each of Malaysia's three ethnic groups. While Malay and Indian parents do not show a consistent sex preference, Chinese parents prefer to have all sons, or a combination of sons and daughters, with more sons than daughters, or at least an equal number of them. Son preference among the Chinese does not seem to be a constraint to fertility decline among that population. Since 1970, Chinese fertility has dropped rapidly; at the same time, Chinese son preference has become more pronounced. Evidence indicates that further reductions in Chinese fertility, through the reduction in sex preference, would be small.
本研究使用1988年进行的第二次马来西亚家庭生活调查的数据,来考察马来西亚三个族群中父母对子女性别的偏好。马来族和印度族父母没有表现出一致的性别偏好,而华裔父母则希望全是儿子,或者是儿子和女儿的组合,儿子数量多于女儿,或者至少二者数量相等。华裔对儿子的偏好似乎并不是该族群生育率下降的一个制约因素。自1970年以来,华裔生育率迅速下降;与此同时,华裔对儿子的偏好变得更加明显。有证据表明,通过减少性别偏好来进一步降低华裔生育率的幅度将很小。