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The BIGGEST reason why Indians migrate is...

Last updated on: December 22, 2016 20:11 IST

Marriage is the most common purpose of migration, with 49 per cent migrating for marriage, followed by moving with households (15 per cent) and work/employment (10 per cent), discovers Devanik Saha.

Illustration: Dominic Xavier/Rediff.com

 

It is not a common practice or desirable culture for a Hindu son in India to get separated from his parents on getting married at the instance of the wife, especially when the son is the only earning member in the family,’ the Supreme Court noted in a October 2016 judgement, while granting a divorce to a couple from Karnataka.

‘In India, generally people do not subscribe to the Western thought where, upon getting married or attaining majority, the son gets separated from the family.

‘In normal circumstances, a wife is expected to be with the family after the marriage. Normally, without any justifiable strong reason, she would never insist that her husband should get separated from the family and live only with her.’

That observation is echoed in the new Census data, which reveals that 97 per cent of the 224 million Indians who migrated after marriage are women.

Four of every 10 Indians (453 million) are migrants, according to the Census data. That is more than the combined population of the US, Germany and Canada.

Marriage is the most common purpose of migration with 49 per cent of them (224 million) migrating for marriage, followed by moving with households (15 per cent) and work/employment (10 per cent).

Women migrate more for education but less for employment

Of 46.4 million Indians who migrated for work/employment, 7.4 million (16 per cent) were female.

No more than 27 per cent of Indian women are in the labour force, the second-lowest rate of female labour-force participation in South Asia after Pakistan, IndiaSpend reported in April 2016.

The labour force, however, doesn’t include women who do ‘unpaid care work’, which refers to all unpaid services within a household, including care of people, housework and voluntary community work.

It appears that more females migrate for business than for employment.

Of 4.3 million Indians migrating for business, 1.1 million (26 per cent) were female; 14 per cent of business establishments in India are run by female entrepreneurs, IndiaSpend reported in May 2016.

Females account for 40 per cent of Indians who migrate for education, reflecting a nationwide male dominance: As many as 1,403 females have never attended any educational institution for every 1,000 males who have not, IndiaSpend reported in November 2015.

Seventy-eight per cent of rural female migrants move for marriage.

As many as 228 million females from rural areas are migrants, of which 179 million (78 per cent) migrated for marriage; the figure was 46 per cent for females from urban areas.

Women from urban areas, on average, marry more than two years later than their rural counterparts, IndiaSpend reported in May 2015.

The median age at marriage among urban women was 18.8 years, according to the National Family Health Survey 2005-06, compared with 16.4 years among rural women.

A quarter of all women aged 15 to 49 in urban areas have never been married, compared with 17 per cent of rural women.

Saha is an MA Gender and Development student at Institute of Development Studies, University of Sussex. Reprinted with permission from IndiaSpend.com, a data-driven, public-interest journalism, non-profit organisation.

 

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Devanik Saha