Intergenerational mobility of scheduled castes, tribes up; gender gap persists
The gender gap in intergenerational mobility, which would constrain girls more than boys, is almost zero in the current generation in Brazil, China, Egypt and Indonesia. By contrast, it has remained unchanged in India for those born in the 1940s, 1950s and 1980s.
Other data also show that girls are more disadvantaged in India than boys–68.4% of Indian women were literate in 2015-16 versus 85.7% men, and the sex ratio at birth was 919 women for every 1,000 boys, betraying a preference for male children.
On the positive side, the difference in the intergenerational mobility among scheduled castes and tribes, when compared to other social groups, has reduced between 1983 and 2004-05, the report said, citing a 2012 study. This could be the effect of the strengthening of community networks within scheduled castes and tribes, increasing market competition because of economic liberalisation, and reservation policies in education and government jobs, the study published in the American Economic Journal: Applied Economics said.