By Devanik Saha
Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan and Bihar are the worst states for women, an IndiaSpend analysis of social indicators and demographic data of Indian states reveals.
Women in these states are among those who are most likely to be aborted as children, have the lowest literacy rates, marry earliest, die most frequently while pregnant, bear the most children, have the most crimes committed against them and are least likely to be employed.
As many as 376 million people live in UP, Bihar and Rajasthan - more than the populations of the US and the UK combined.
Here are eight indicators we considered from the Sample Registration Survey 2014 - released in June 2016 - the Census 2011 and the National Crime Records Bureau. The three states may not do worst in all indicators individually but collectively, they find the most mention.
- Mean age of females at marriage: Women in West Bengal marry youngest (19.3 years), followed by UP and Rajasthan (19.4 years for both).
UP has the largest number of girls married between 10-19 years (2.1 million) in India, followed by West Bengal (1.3 million) and Bihar (1.25 million). One in four women in Rajasthan marries before the legal age of 18, as IndiaSpend previously reported.
Being educated helps girls resist early marriage "to a great extent", revealed a 2013 study conducted by Harvard's François Xavier Bagnoud Center for Health and Human Rights. Education also correlates with fewer and healthier children and healthier mothers.
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Maternal mortality rate (MMR): At 27.8, UP has the highest MMR among all Indian states, followed by Rajasthan (23.9) and Bihar/Jharkhand (21.4).
In June 2016, the health ministry launched the Pradhan Mantri Surakshit Matritwa Yojana (Prime Minister safe pregnancy scheme, PMSMY), which will run parallel to the Janani Suraksha Yojana (JSY) and Janani Shishu Suraksha Karyakram (Mother child safety programme, JSSK).
It aims to provide ante-natal care for 30 million pregnant women on the ninth of every month from a specialist. Where government doctors are not available, those in private practices will join the effort.
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Reproductive span: Women in Uttar Pradesh have Indias longest reproductive spans: 10 years. Since higher reproductive spans correlate with higher fertility rates, Uttar Pradesh women also bear the most children in any state, 4.14, according to Census 2011 data.
The reproductive lifespan of UP women is followed by those in Rajasthan (9.2 years) and Bihar (9.1 years), all above the average Indian reproductive span of 6.6 years.
The correlation between reproductive span and high fertility rates holds true for Rajasthan and Bihar too, with rates of 3.99 and 3.97 respectively. The average Indian fertility rate is 3.3.
Average births decline with an increase in education levels: The average births for women in India who are graduates and above is 1.9, against 3.8 for women who are illiterate, IndiaSpend reported in May 2016.
UP, Rajasthan and Bihar have female literacy and education levels below the Indian norm.
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Average household size, percentage of households of six people or more: Households in UP are Indias largest, an average of 5.6 people, another indication that women bear more children than other states. This also means they have the largest burden of housework.
After UP, Rajasthan (5.5) and Jharkhand (5) report Indias largest families.
Furthermore, 44 per cent of households in UP have more than six people, followed by Rajasthan (38.8 per cent) and Jammu & Kashmir (34 per cent).
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Crimes against women: As many as 38,467 crimes against women were registered in UP - one every 15 minutes - followed by West Bengal (38,299) and Rajasthan (31,151).
However, when it comes to crime rate-crimes per 100,000 population of women - Delhi has the highest rate (169.6), followed by Assam (123.4) and Rajasthan (91.4).
UP has a crime rate of 38.4, while Bihars rate is 31.3, these seemingly low rates likely due to low reporting of cases and fudged statistics, as IndiaSpend has reported.
India reports 26 crimes against women every hour, or one complaint every two minutes, IndiaSpend reported in September 2015.
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Literacy rates: Bihar has Indias lowest female literacy rate of 51 percent of Bihari women are illiterate, followed by Rajasthan (52.1 per cent), Jharkhand (55.4 per cent) and UP (56.4 per cent), according to the Census 2011.
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Female work-force participation rates: Bihar has the lowest female work-force participation rate (FWPR), with only 90 per 1,000 women employed. UP has a FWPR of 253 while Rajasthan has a rate of 453, higher than UP, Bihar and the national average of 331.
If as many women as men worked outside the home, Indias $2 trillion (Rs 134 lakh crore) gross domestic product (GDP) would increase by 27 per cent, IndiaSpend reported in March 2016.
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Child sex ratio (CSR): At 834, Haryana has Indias worst child sex ratio, the number of females per thousand males in the age group 0-6, followed by Punjab (846) and Jammu & Kashmir (862).
At 888, Rajasthan has Indias fifth-worst child sex ratio.
UP is not among the five states with the worst CSRs, but its 902 is lower than the national average of 918; Bihar performs considerably better with a ratio of 935.
Apart from UP, Bihar and Rajasthan, a closer look at the data reveals that two indicators of female emancipation for Jammu & Kashmir (J&K) are worsening.
For instance, J&K is among the worst five states in average household size, percentage of households with families of six people or larger, child sex ratio, literacy rate and female work-force participation rate. Of these, the child sex ratio and female work-force participation rate have worsened since 2001, while the other indicators have improved.
J&K is the only state, apart from Rajasthan, which saw an absolute decline in CSR over 10 years to 2011; the CSR declined from 941 to 862, which means fewer girls are being born. Since maternal and child mortality has improved since 2001, it can only mean that girls are being aborted.
(09.07.2016. In arrangement with IndiaSpend.org, a data-driven, non-profit, public interest journalism platform. Devanik Saha is a New Delhi-based freelance journalist. The views expressed are those of IndiaSpend. The author can be contacted at respond@indiaspend.org)