Investment isn't just about stocks and bonds. In my independent work for economics, I examined health investment, which is measured by metrics such as vaccination, nutrition, medicine, and doctor's visits. I looked at how demographic policies in China and India impacted the gap in health investment between young boys and young girls. I found that, when certain (seemingly unrelated) policies are at play, the gap between health investment for young boys and girls will widen or shrink. I examined the Pre-Conception Pre-Natal Diagnostic Techniques Act (PCPNDT) from India and the One Child Policy (OCP) in China. The PCPNDT prevents parents from knowing the sex of their child before it is born. It was passed as a response to a high level of female feticide. The OCP was passed to curb population growth, and resulted in a higher rate of female feticide as many families wanted their only child to be a boy. I found that, in both contexts, when pressure and accessibility of abortion was greater, there were more female feticides. However, the girls that were still carried to term under these conditions received relatively more health investment, as they were relatively more wanted by their families.