Reporter’s Diary: Looking At Male Suicides in India

This post takes a look at the statistics on suicides in India and whether men are more likely to commit suicide than women.

133,623 suicides were reported in India in 2015. Credit: lpk 90901/Flickr:CC BY-NC-ND 2.0

“Men are more vulnerable than women.”

“This country is biased against men.”

“More Men commit suicides than women.”

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“Patriarchy affects men more than women. No one talks about suicides by married men, everyone talks only about housewives’ suicides.”

These are some of the arguments made by men rights activists and people opposed to feminism. So what is the reality? Are men more likely to commit suicide? Are they more oppressed than women? This article will explore the conundrum of male suicides in India and try to answer some of these questions, strictly through the lens of the data available to us.

The data

In 2015, 133,623 suicides in India were reported in India, of which 91,528 (68%) were by men, 42,088 were by women, according to data from National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB).

Credit: NCRB, 2015

Within the category of women, housewives (22,293) accounted for 53% of the female victims (42,088). In the same year, as many as 91,528 men committed suicide – 23% were daily wage earners (20,409) followed by persons engaged in farming sector (11,584) and self-employed persons (11,124).

Of the 86,808 married persons who committed suicides in 2015, 64,534 (74%) were men, 26% women. However, of 28,344 suicides by married women, housewives accounted for 79% of them.

The data shows: