by Margaret Datiles, J.D., Associate Fellow
 The consequences of sex-selective abortions are not limited to 163  million missing girls and unnatural sex ratios.  The effects are deeper  and far-reaching.  Increased violence and suicide, militant societies,  prostitution, human trafficking, the sale of women, forced marriage, the  rise of consumer eugenics, and an overall devaluation of women in  society are direct effects of this systematic campaign against women.   As will be discussed in further detail in this essay, these are the  ironic yet predictable results of “choice.”
This essay shall address these questions: How much has the sex ratio  changed worldwide?  What are the causal factors of imbalanced sex ratios  and gendercide?  What implications does the rise of global gendercide  have for feminist abortion rights advocates?  And  what is to be done?
Naturally, in all societies, there are 105 boys born for every 100  girls.  Since baby boys have a slightly higher chance of infant death  than girls, nature has found a way to balance the sex ratio so that, as  adults, there is close to one man for every woman.  In the last 25  years, this balance has been skewed to naturally impossible numbers, in  varying degrees, all over the world.  In its 2010 Social Blue Paper,  the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CASS) reported that the average  ratio in China today is 123 boys for every 100 girls.  Similarly, the  British Medical Journal found in 2009 that six provinces in China had  sex ratios of over 130.  [Note 4]  South Korea, Singapore and Taiwan  also have skewed sex ratios.  In India, at least 46 districts have  reported ratios over 125.  Imbalanced sex ratios are also characteristic  of former communist countries.  Armenia has a ratio of 120, Georgia  118, Azerbajian 115, and Serbia 108.
What do these numbers mean?  First and foremost, they mean that at least  163 million girls who should be alive are missing from the world.   Secondly, they mean that in many countries, there are not enough women  for men to marry.  Within a decade, CASS has predicted that there will  be 30 to 40 million Chinese men who will not be able to find wives.  
This “bachelor surplus” has had devastating effects for women in  countries with unnatural sex ratios.  The scarcity and demand for wives  has resurrected the ancient practice of selling and buying women into  forced marriages.  A family will sell their daughter to the man with the  highest price, and men consider women to be commodities for purchase.   Consequently, sex trafficking and prostitution is rampant in these  countries.  Furthermore, men who cannot find women in their native  countries to marry will purchase and “import” women from elsewhere.
Suicide  rates for women of child-bearing age have also increased in  these countries.  In China, many women  have been pressured by their  husbands, families and societies to abort their daughters  commit  suicide by drinking agricultural fertilizer. Research has shown that  crime waves, violence and militant societies are the hazards of  “bachelor surplus.”  If brides are prizes for the rich, a society with  an imbalanced sex ratio will end up with millions of poor, frustrated,  young men who have no hope for marriage.  This class of men historically  causes increased crime as well as a general societal instability and  unrest. I suggest a footnote here to support the claim just made [Bill  May] Indeed, countries neighboring China are afraid of the excess of  unmarried, young, violent men who have enlisted in the Chinese military  and police force; specifically, they are afraid of the increasing  possibility of war.
Researchers have identified the causes of gendercide and the resulting  distortion of sex ratios: technological advancement, increased access to  ultrasound, abortion rights, cultural preferences for males, and laws  such as China’s one-child policy.  In her book, Unnatural Selection,  Hvistendahl narrowed these causes down to just one: abortion.  Although  she is a self-proclaimed pro-choice woman, Hvistendahl nonetheless  concluded that none of the other causal factors could be effective  without abortion.  The 2009 British Medical Journal also concluded that  “Sex selective abortion accounts for almost all the excess males.”  It  is evident that abortion is the number one method of eliminating female  babies.
It is ironic that the feminist reproductive health rights movement is  responsible for this global trend of eliminating females through  sex-selective abortions.  The very movement that purportedly sought to  emancipate and empower women has caused women not only the devaluation  of women, but has endangered their very existence.  And now, when we are  faced with data showing the severe adverse effects that abortion has  had on the women worldwide, the feminist movement has failed to stand up  for these women and continues to ignore the fact that 163 million girls  missing because of sex-selective abortion.
This conflict pinpoints the fundamental error of the feminist and  reproductive health rights movement– you can’t promote or protect women  while at the same time promoting abortion.  The right to choose allows  you to choose a boy over a girl.  The self-contradiction of the feminist  slogan “pro-choice, pro-woman” is shown most evidently in the instance  of global gendercide. 
Hvistendahl could not help blaming international pro-choice advocacy  groups such as Planned Parenthood for pushing sex-selective abortions in  foreign countries and purposefully neglecting to lobby against it.   Hvistendahl’s research uncovered the leading role that pro-choice  reproductive health organizations played in causing global gendercide.
Abortion and the misuse of ultrasound may not be the only way to  eliminate female babies.  Although in vitro fertilization is not  currently widely available worldwide, it allows parents to select the  gender of their child and has further advanced consumer eugenics.  In  the years to come, in vitro fertilization may join ultrasound abuse and  abortion as a primary method of gendercide.
The solution to gendercide?  Hvistendahl proposes strict enforcement of  bans against sex-selective abortions, including police surveillance and  punishment by imprisonment.  However, she misses the mark on this one.   China and India already have legal bans on sex-selective abortion, and  Arizona is the first American state to ban both race- and sex-selective  abortions.  U.S. Congressman Trent Franks (R-AZ) has also introduced a  sex-selection abortion ban on the federal level.  Although bans on  sex-selection abortion are helpful and increase public awareness of the  issue, they are not the real solution.  Bans and restrictions on  abortion itself are the only way to stop gendercide through  sex-selective abortion.
In conclusion, the unfortunate worldwide consequences of sex-selective  abortions have revealed the irreconcilable and inherently contradictory  nature of the feminist pro-choice movement, and has proven the  effectiveness and pro-woman nature of abortion bans and restrictions.   
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Note 1. Available at http://www.un.org/womenwatch/daw/egm/vaw_legislation_2009/Expert%20Paper%20EGMGPLHP%20_Asmita%20Basu_.pdf  
Note 2.  Available at http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702303657404576361691165631366.html
Note 3. Available at http://www.bmj.com/content/338/bmj.b1211.abstract
See also http://www.bmj.com/content/338/bmj.b1211.full  
 
