China One Child Policy Caused a 'Marriage Squeeze' - Business Insider


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Key Impacts of China's One-Child Policy

China's one-child policy, implemented in 1980, significantly reduced the country's birth rate. However, a preference for sons resulted in a substantial gender imbalance, creating a phenomenon known as a 'marriage squeeze'.

The Marriage Squeeze

The imbalance between the number of men and women of marrying age has led to a substantial number of unmarried men. A 2013 BBC report indicated a surplus of 20 million men compared to women. Further projections suggest this disparity will worsen.

  • By 2050, there could be 186 single men for every 100 single women (The Economist).

Consequences and Potential Solutions

The severe imbalance has prompted discussions about potential solutions, including the controversial suggestion of polyandry. The recent shift to a two-child policy is seen as a step towards mitigating future imbalances by encouraging parents to have daughters.

Gender-Selective Abortion

Despite the illegality of sex-selective abortions, they reportedly remain widespread, contributing significantly to the gender imbalance. The estimated 336 million abortions performed since 1971 are thought to be largely gender-related.

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2015-10-29T18:23:25Z

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On Thursday, China announced that it will be expanding it's "one child policy" into a "two child policy," meaning that couples can now have two kids without fear of being fined by the government.  The policy had been in effect since 1980. The idea was to curb the birth rate in the world's most populous country.  It did so, but at a price of what demographers call a "marriage squeeze." Between the one-child policy and China's hunger for sons over daughters, the birthrates of boys greatly outpaced that of girls — leading to a lack of potential brides in successive generations. Though determining the gender of fetuses was outlawed in the 1980s, it still happens at a large, though underground, scale — giving the impression that many of the 336 million abortions that have reportedly been performed since 1971 were gender-related. According to a 2013 BBC report, there are 20 million more men in China then there are women, and more than 33% of men aged 25 to 29 in China are unmarried, while about 20% of women are unwed.  If births rates were normal, China would have 66 million more girls born in 2010, the Economist reports. By the Economist's projections — which are based on one-child policy — by 2050 there would be an estimated 186 single men looking to marry for every 100 single women. The so-called bachelor problem has gotten so extreme that one economist has called for polyandry — the practice of one woman marrying multiple men.  As unsavory as it a sounds, a potential outcome of the "two child policy" is that Chinese parents will be more open to having daughters, so the next generation doesn't hit another marriage squeeze. 

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