Back to browse results
India’s ‘Missing Women’ and Men’s Sexual Risk Behavior
Authors: Scott J. South, Katherine Trent, and Sunita Bose
Source: Population Research and Policy Review, 31(6):777–795
Topic(s): Marriage
Paid sex
Sexual behavior
Sexually transmitted infections (STIs)
Country: Asia
  India
Published: DEC 2012
Abstract: Although scholars and policymakers have long been concerned with the “missing women” of India, little rigorous research has examined the consequences of India’s sex ratio imbalance for young men’s sexual risk behavior and reproductive health. We use data from the third wave of India’s 2005–2006 National Family and Health Survey to examine the influence of the community female-to-male sex ratio at ages 10–39 on men’s likelihood of marrying early in life, of engaging in premarital, multi-partnered, and commercial sex, and of contracting a sexually-transmitted disease. We estimate logistic regression models that control for respondents’ demographic and socioeconomic status and that adjust for the clustering of observations within communities. Net of the effects of other characteristics, the female-to-male sex ratio is positively and significantly associated with the likelihood that men marry prior to age 18 and inversely and significantly associated with the odds that men have had intercourse with a commercial sex worker. However, no significant net associations are observed between the sex ratio and the other outcomes. Education, wealth, religious affiliation, caste, and geographic region emerge as significant predictors of Indian men’s sexual risk behaviors. Keywords Sex ratio Sexual behavior India Marriage Commercial sex STD