List of Chinese administrative divisions by sex ratio
| First or provincial level Administrative divisions of China by: |
|---|
The gender ratio of Chinese administrative divisions is the sex ratio of males to females in the population of the particular area, and is a subject of academic study because of a high imbalance in births since the 1990s.[1]
Gender ratio for 1-4 ages
| Rank | Name | Boys for Every 100 Girls |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Jiangxi | 143 |
| 2 | Henan | 142 |
| 3 | Anhui | 138 |
| 4 | Hainan | 134 |
| 5 | Hunan | 133 |
| 5 | Guangdong | 133 |
| 7 | Hubei | 129 |
| 8 | Guizhou | 127 |
| 9 | Shaanxi | 125 |
| 10 | Jiangsu | 123 |
| 11 | Hebei | 122 |
| 11 | Guangxi | 122 |
| 13 | Gansu | 120 |
| 14 | Fujian | 119 |
| 14 | Chongqing | 119 |
| 16 | Tianjin | 118 |
| 17 | Sichuan | 116 |
| 17 | Shandong | 116 |
| 19 | Yunnan | 115 |
| 20 | Liaoning | 114 |
| 21 | Zhejiang | 113 |
| 22 | Beijing | 112 |
| 22 | Shanxi | 112 |
| 22 | Jilin | 112 |
| 22 | Ningxia | 112 |
| 26 | Heilongjiang | 111 |
| 26 | Qinghai | 111 |
| 28 | Shanghai | 109 |
| 29 | Inner Mongolia | 107 |
| 30 | Xinjiang | 106 |
| 31 | Tibet | 104 |
Figures are from a 2009 study published in the British Medical Journal.[2]
See also
References
- ↑ Wei Xing Zhu,
Li Lu, Therese Hesketh (9 April 2009). "China's excess males, sex selective abortion, and one child policy: analysis of data from 2005 national intercensus survey". British Medical Journal. 338: b1211. doi:10.1136/bmj.b1211. line feed character in
|authors=at position 15 (help) - ↑ http://www.bmj.com/content/338/bmj.b1211/T2.expansion.html Archived October 19, 2012, at the Wayback Machine.
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