[One part of it has been long known: How China’s former one-child policy left a glut of boys — preferred by most Chinese families. Girls were sometimes aborted, killed after birth or simply left in a bureaucratic limbo as not registered with authorities before the one-child rule was eased in 2016.]
By
Amanda Erickson
A
couple walks on a street at an abandoned industrial area of Houjie town in
Dongguan,
China, in 2016. (Lam Yik Fei/Getty Images)
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DA’ANLIU,
China — The new rule was
taped onto doorways around town: Officials were limiting what a groom-to-be
could pay for a bride.
The going rate was about $38,000, or five
times the average annual salary in this village about a four-hour drive north
of Beijing. Now, families were told to keep it below $2,900.
Anything more and they would risk being
accused of human trafficking.
The “bride price” — cash, and possibly a
house or other goodies to the bride-to-be’s parents — has been part of the
marriage pact in most of China for centuries. The costs, though, are swelling
as China copes with one of the biggest demographic imbalances in history.
One part of it has been long known: How
China’s former one-child policy left a glut of boys — preferred by most Chinese
families. Girls were sometimes aborted, killed after birth or simply left in a
bureaucratic limbo as not registered with authorities before the one-child rule
was eased in 2016.
There are an estimated 30 million or so more
men then women in China — giving it one of the most lopsided ratios in the
world.
But China’s economic expansion in the past
decade has taken a further gender bite out of rural areas.
Many teenage girls leave to pursue education
or better-paying work in cities. Most do not come back to places like Da’anliu,
a small village where most people make money harvesting pears or working in a
handful of small factories.
So officials in Da’anliu and other villages
have taken matters into their own hands on one thing they can control: the
bride price.
They want local marriages and the local
children they could produce. Yet the high cost of dowries stands in the way.
The twist, however, is that the well-meaning
efforts can split villages.
The controls are good if you have a son. Not
so good for families with a daughter.
Ask Liang, a pear farmer in Da’anliu. He has
one daughter. When it comes time for her to marry, “I will ask whatever amount
I want,” he said. “It’s not fair otherwise.”
It wasn’t really about the money, he claimed.
He planned to give the bride price to his daughter anyway, once she started her
family. It was the principle of the thing for Liang, who asked that only the
one name be used in his discussion of a sensitive family issue.
“It’s the market,” he said. “I’m allowed to
charge what the market will bear for my pears. Why not my daughter?”
“In the rural areas, the amount of bride
price may equal up to dozens time of the annual net income,” Quanbao Jiang, a
professor of demography at Xi’an Jiaotong University, wrote in an email.
That has the effect of draining resources and
limiting a family’s ability to care for the elderly or the young. Is also has
left men from impoverished areas without any hope of finding a mate.
The Da’anliu Communist Party secretary, Liang
Huabin, has seen the way families scrimp and save and panic over the bride
price. They say “it’s tough to manage,” he said, especially since the pear
harvest has been bad the past few years.
He was not sure what to do about it until one
of his constituents sent him a picture of a bride price limit instituted in a
village in China’s southern Hunan region. He decided to try something similar.
Liang knows the village cannot do much to
enforce the rule. But he hopes people will eventually adjust their thinking.
“It will be difficult to really have an impact immediately,” he said. “But
gradually it will sink in.”
He has two young granddaughters, he said.
When it comes time for them to marry, “I’ll encourage their parents to ask for
a reasonable price,” he said.
He acknowledged there is little else he can
do.
Licun Tan, 39, should be thrilled about
Liang’s effort.
Licun runs a small bodega out of her home.
She has a 16-year-old son, who she will try to marry off in a couple of years
after he graduates from high school and works a bit.
She’s already stressed about saving for the
bride price. She opened a second store to bring in extra money. And her husband
works, too. But she’s not sure it will be enough.
At the same time, she can’t imagine abiding
by a limit. There simply aren’t enough women around.
“The rule is the rule, but who will follow
it?” she said. “If I followed it, the result would be no girls to marry.”
Wang Feng, a sociologist who studies Chinese
demography at the University of California at Irvine, said there is incredible
social pressure for families to help arrange perceived “good marriages” for
their sons.
People would find ways around any regulation
— even limits on bride price.
“It’s trying to cure a symptom, not the root
issue,” he said.
Yang Liu contributed to this report.
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