Saturday, December 22, 2007

I Wasn't Expecting This

In a hurry to get out of Palookaville and go to a singalong (no singalong, my mistake) Messiah, but this one (from UB's Wichita bureau) is just too extraordinary to ignore (link):
Where Boys Were Kings, a Shift Toward Baby Girls

By Choe Sang-Hun
Published: December 23, 2007

SEOUL, South Korea — When Park He-ran was a young mother, other women would approach her to ask what her secret was. She had given birth to three boys in a row at a time when South Korean women considered it their paramount duty to bear a son.

Ms. Park, a 61-year-old newspaper executive, gets a different reaction today. “When I tell people I have three sons and no daughter, they say they are sorry for my misfortune,” she said. “Within a generation, I have turned from the luckiest woman possible to a pitiful mother.”

In South Korea, once one of Asia’s most rigidly patriarchal societies, a centuries-old preference for baby boys is fast receding. And that has led to what seems to be a decrease in the number of abortions performed after ultrasounds that reveal the sex of a fetus.

According to a study released by the World Bank in October, South Korea is the first of several Asian countries with large sex imbalances at birth to reverse the trend, moving toward greater parity between the sexes. Last year, the ratio was 107.4 boys born for every 100 girls, still above what is considered normal, but down from a peak of 116.5 boys born for every 100 girls in 1990. ...

As one who has prattled on about the social tensions generated by an imbalance of boys, this has got to bse interesting news. Indeed, the entire story is worth your attention.

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