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April 19, 2005

Sex selection in the United States

Emily Bazelon's Slate article contains a very interesting tidbit. It's well known that in the developing world, sex selection technology (primarily abortions) is used to choose male children. Not so in the US:
In the United States, the Virginia-based company MicroSort has been helping parents give nature a nudge since 1996, through a process called cytometry that separates X and Y chromosome-bearing sperm cells. Seventy-nine percent of the company's clients shoot for girls.

Sounds like a good basis for trade.

Posted by ekr at April 19, 2005 7:22 AM | Filed under:

Comments

Trade in what? Psuedo-lesbian porn?

Posted by: Skippy at April 19, 2005 10:04 AM

Not a surprising development if you look at it from a the-US-is-becoming-more-fundamentalist socio-religious point of view. Multiple wives per husband is quite a common feature of what might be considered more fundamentalist cultures. I'd say these people aren't likely planning as much for extra-national trade, but rather are anticipating increased domestic demand.

Posted by: Craig Hughes at April 21, 2005 11:35 AM

Ever read _The Rainbow Credenza_? Sex imbalance ends up being a big driver for social change in that book....

I've read several places that there are many villages in India where the male/female ratio is out of whack enough to cause some big problems, as a result of portable ultrasound machines and cheap aboritions. It will be interesting to see what comes of that. I know there are cases of immigrant groups with a large sex imbalance (including the Chinese in the US at one point); maybe looking into what happened in those cases would yield some insights....

--John

Posted by: John Kelsey at April 26, 2005 7:24 AM