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More Chinese women choosing singledom as economy stutters

Published 03/06/2024, 08:10 PM
Updated 03/07/2024, 12:26 AM
© Reuters. Chai Wanrou, 28, poses during an interview with Reuters, at the Daming Palace National Heritage Park, in Xian, Shaanxi province, China, March 1, 2024. REUTERS/Xiaoyu Yin

By Laurie Chen

XIAN, China (Reuters) - Freelance copywriter Chai Wanrou thinks marriage is an unfair institution. Like many young women in China, she is part of a growing movement that envisions a future with no husband and no children, presenting the government with a challenge it could do without.

"Regardless of whether you're extremely successful or just ordinary, women still make the biggest sacrifices at home," the 28-year-old feminist said at a cafe in the northwestern city of Xian.

"Many who got married in previous generations, especially women, sacrificed themselves and their career development, and didn't get the happy life they were promised. Living my own life well is difficult enough nowadays," she told Reuters.

President Xi Jinping last year stressed the need to "cultivate a new culture of marriage and childbearing" as China's population fell for a second consecutive year and new births reached historic lows.

Chinese Premier Li Qiang also vowed to "work towards a birth-friendly society" and boost childcare services in this year's government work report.

The Communist Party views the nuclear family as the bedrock of social stability, with unmarried mothers stigmatised and largely denied benefits. But a growing number of educated women, facing unprecedented insecurity amid record youth unemployment and an economic downturn, are espousing "singleism" instead.

China's single population aged over 15 hit a record 239 million in 2021, according to official data. Marriage registrations rebounded slightly last year due to a pandemic backlog, after reaching historic lows in 2022. A 2021 Communist Youth League survey of some 2,900 unmarried urban young people found that 44% of women do not plan to marry.

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Marriage, however, is still regarded as a milestone of adulthood in China and the proportion of adults who never marry remains low. But in an other sign of its declining popularity, many Chinese are delaying tying the knot, with the average age of first marriage rising to 28.67 in 2020 from 24.89 in 2010, according to census data.

In Shanghai, this figure reached 30.6 for men and 29.2 for women last year, according to city statistics.

"Feminist activism is basically not allowed (in China), but refusing marriage and childbirth can be said to be ... a form of non-violent disobedience towards the patriarchal state," said Lü Pin, a Chinese feminist activist based in the United States.

NO APOLOGIES

After decades of improving women's education levels, workforce participation and social mobility, Chinese authorities now face a dilemma as the same group of women have become increasingly resistant to their propaganda.

Long-term single lifestyles are gradually becoming more widespread in China, giving rise to online communities of mostly single women who seek solidarity from like-minded people.

Posts with the hashtags "No marriage, no children" from female influencers often in their thirties or forties on Xiaohongshu, China's Instagram, regularly gain thousands of likes.

One anti-marriage forum on Douban, another social media platform, has 9,200 members, while another dedicated to "singleism" has 3,600 members who discuss collective retirement plans, among other topics.

Liao Yueyi, a 24-year-old unemployed graduate in the southern city of Nanning, recently declared to her mother that she "wakes up from nightmares about having children".

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"No marriage or kids is a decision I've made after deep consideration. I don't owe anyone an apology, my parents have accepted it," she posted on WeChat.

Instead she has decided to "lie flat" - a Chinese expression that means doing just enough to get by - and save money for future travels.

"I think it's okay to date or cohabit, but children are a huge asset investment with minimal returns," she said, adding that she has discussed renting a house with some female friends when they all retire.

Many of the women interviewed cited a desire for self-exploration, disillusionment with patriarchal Chinese family dynamics and a lack of "enlightened" male partners as the main factors behind their decision to stay single and childless.

Gender equality also plays a role: all the women said it was difficult to find a man who valued their autonomy and believed in equal division of household labour.

"There's an oversupply of highly educated women and not enough highly educated men," said Xiaoling Shu, professor of sociology at the University of California, Davis. Decades of the one-child policy have led to 32.3 million more men than women in 2022, according to official data.

"College-educated women become stronger believers in advocating for their rights and status in society," Shu said. "Well-educated women in search of supportive life partners find fewer suitable men who also endorse women's rights."

While not all the women interviewed identified as feminist or viewed themselves as deliberately defying the government, their actions reflect a broader trend of Chinese female empowerment expressed through personal choices.

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And even though some analysts believe that the number of people who remain single for life will not grow exponentially in the future, delayed marriages and falling fertility are likely to pose a threat to China's demographic goals.

"In the long run, women's enthusiasm for marriage and childbirth will only continue to decrease," said feminist Lü.

"I believe this is the most important long-term crisis that China will face."

Latest comments

Having spent much time in China, I noticed the overall level of happiness fade. As the government became more intrusive, as cameras went up and total control crept into the everyday lives, it seemed to suck the life out of the people... leaving only the arduous aspects of life in a communist country front and center. The country runs on lying, bribery, jealousy, indignation and self-aggrandization. I knew years ago that once the rest of the world caught on to the tactics used by China to grow their economy since joining the WTO, they're days were numbered. And now we see I was right all along. Now there remains the loss of optimism.. of air sucked out of its lungs by an oppressive, intrusive, power obsessed government. American leftists seeking to control speech, thought, possessions, travel, food, religion, and wealth really need to learn from this, but they won't because they can't. They idolize the Chinese government. They fantasize about such unreal levels of power and control.
Nice propaganda, but every study shows that women are more happy and financially secure when they are married. Women are brainwashed to think they are oppressed, but they were given a great gift to be able to stay home and manage the home and kids and have a man go out and slave away to bring home money and food. If a woman wants to pretend to be a man that is fine, but she will find that the estrogen in her blood will make her much more emotionally unequip to deal with the burden of a male lifestyle. Then when her eggs dry up and she can no longer reproduce all she is left with is crying about men on social media while just having a one bedroom apartment that smells like cat piss.
And this is how the feminist agenda dies out, no kids to pass  on their agenda too
Did you read the article? The fault is an outdated patriarchy.
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