The Japan Times - Chinese authorities play cash-giving Cupid to boost marriage rates

EUR -
AED 3.833114
AFN 76.567491
ALL 99.259156
AMD 416.113834
ANG 1.876383
AOA 951.75484
ARS 1102.422229
AUD 1.658046
AWG 1.878463
AZN 1.77241
BAM 1.962496
BBD 2.102103
BDT 126.4916
BGN 1.956508
BHD 0.393332
BIF 3082.557627
BMD 1.043591
BND 1.409063
BOB 7.193545
BRL 6.019742
BSD 1.041057
BTN 90.414201
BWP 14.410307
BYN 3.407074
BYR 20454.380029
BZD 2.091266
CAD 1.487999
CDF 2995.105789
CHF 0.951025
CLF 0.026012
CLP 998.192852
CNY 7.627658
CNH 7.601745
COP 4348.851656
CRC 526.943418
CUC 1.043591
CUP 27.655157
CVE 110.640926
CZK 25.050315
DJF 185.393466
DKK 7.459066
DOP 64.565872
DZD 141.659649
EGP 52.823958
ERN 15.653862
ETB 133.710299
FJD 2.411373
FKP 0.838686
GBP 0.83527
GEL 2.942647
GGP 0.838686
GHS 16.084419
GIP 0.838686
GMD 74.61865
GNF 8999.69945
GTQ 8.037308
GYD 218.027661
HKD 8.125878
HNL 26.543221
HRK 7.535612
HTG 136.371646
HUF 401.40678
IDR 17067.145132
ILS 3.733248
IMP 0.838686
INR 90.652299
IQD 1363.866694
IRR 43922.136075
ISK 146.603632
JEP 0.838686
JMD 163.936434
JOD 0.740426
JPY 160.901901
KES 134.738025
KGS 91.261942
KHR 4173.741074
KMF 495.235707
KPW 939.325723
KRW 1510.905541
KWD 0.322302
KYD 0.867569
KZT 525.076636
LAK 22636.780841
LBP 93247.90984
LKR 309.318384
LRD 207.695689
LSL 19.197463
LTL 3.081453
LVL 0.631258
LYD 5.129527
MAD 10.412429
MDL 19.609379
MGA 4846.583383
MKD 61.53006
MMK 2190.454189
MNT 3612.026342
MOP 8.352178
MRU 41.449201
MUR 48.589402
MVR 16.069533
MWK 1805.320449
MXN 21.40199
MYR 4.649176
MZN 66.696045
NAD 19.197186
NGN 1569.372692
NIO 38.314403
NOK 11.70635
NPR 144.675041
NZD 1.844208
OMR 0.401795
PAB 1.041052
PEN 3.863483
PGK 4.185623
PHP 60.68011
PKR 290.673695
PLN 4.157828
PYG 8192.069765
QAR 3.795998
RON 4.977196
RSD 117.110727
RUB 98.098587
RWF 1482.522415
SAR 3.914022
SBD 8.815174
SCR 15.242662
SDG 627.198197
SEK 11.284676
SGD 1.406588
SHP 0.859488
SLE 23.790587
SLL 21883.578854
SOS 595.056039
SRD 36.739585
STD 21600.222927
SVC 9.109169
SYP 13569.828152
SZL 19.195773
THB 35.302069
TJS 11.373745
TMT 3.652568
TND 3.31697
TOP 2.444196
TRY 37.687401
TTD 7.063168
TWD 34.204007
TZS 2709.161534
UAH 43.552422
UGX 3829.958033
USD 1.043591
UYU 45.113282
UZS 13523.142074
VES 63.940076
VND 26559.386313
VUV 129.053828
WST 2.961052
XAF 658.231323
XAG 0.032325
XAU 0.000358
XCD 2.820356
XDR 0.797128
XOF 658.206007
XPF 119.331742
YER 258.810603
ZAR 19.264217
ZMK 9393.568829
ZMW 29.124795
ZWL 336.035818
  • RBGPF

    64.0100

    64.01

    +100%

  • SCS

    -0.0500

    11.93

    -0.42%

  • BCC

    -4.6000

    118.72

    -3.87%

  • RIO

    0.3900

    62.04

    +0.63%

  • CMSC

    -0.1800

    23.28

    -0.77%

  • RELX

    0.1100

    51.44

    +0.21%

  • RYCEF

    0.0200

    7.69

    +0.26%

  • NGG

    -0.9000

    60.58

    -1.49%

  • GSK

    0.0600

    36.13

    +0.17%

  • BTI

    0.2200

    42.74

    +0.51%

  • BCE

    0.3800

    23.26

    +1.63%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    12.85

    -0.16%

  • AZN

    1.7000

    74.43

    +2.28%

  • CMSD

    -0.1800

    23.71

    -0.76%

  • BP

    0.1300

    34.68

    +0.37%

  • VOD

    0.0900

    8.59

    +1.05%

Chinese authorities play cash-giving Cupid to boost marriage rates
Chinese authorities play cash-giving Cupid to boost marriage rates / Photo: Agatha CANTRILL - AFP

Chinese authorities play cash-giving Cupid to boost marriage rates

Moments after registering their marriage, Zhang Gang and Weng Linbin posed in front of a red backdrop adorned with a Chinese government emblem, fanning out the wad of cash they had received as an incentive to wed.

Text size:

Zhang's home city of Luliang in northern Shanxi province is one of many places in China where local authorities are offering a slew of inducements to coax couples into tying the knot.

The 1,500-yuan ($205) reward the couple received is part of official efforts to boost the country's population, which fell for the third straight year in 2024.

The sum is half a month's average wage for Luliang's urban population -- and more than the monthly average wage for its rural citizens, according to official data.

"I think this policy is quite effective in improving the current marital and romantic situation," Zhang told AFP.

"When I mentioned this policy to my friends, they all thought it was great."

More generally, though, authorities are fighting a tide of reluctance from young people.

Last year marriages dropped by a fifth compared to 2023, data released Monday showed.

When it comes to having children, experts say that higher costs -- especially for education and childcare -- and the challenging employment market for recent graduates are among factors discouraging would-be parents.

When Luliang's cash incentive for marriage was announced online, many commented that the amount wouldn't be enough to justify the commitment.

The reward -- which has an age cut-off of 35 for women -- is just the flashiest part of the package.

The former mining city is also offering subsidies and medical insurance contributions for registering newborns.

Married couples in Luliang are given 2,000 yuan for their first registered child, 5,000 for their second and 8,000 for their third.

- Wedding rush? -

At a Luliang marriage registry office on Wednesday, a festival day, a steady stream of couples were taking advantage of the nuptial bounty, which kicked in on January 1.

The sound of an automatic money counter whirred persistently as lovebirds were handed stacks of fresh 100-yuan bills.

An official at the registry told AFP that since New Year's Day, their office alone had seen over 400 couples get marriage certificates.

At one point the office ran out of cash, said 36-year-old Wang Yanlong, who came to pick up his money this week after getting married in early January.

However, this apparent wedding rush might be deceptive.

"My colleague who was preparing to get married next year decided, because of this benefit, to do it this year," said 34-year-old newlywed Li Yingxing.

Zhang and Weng said they were planning to marry earlier but waited for the bonus, and a registrar in another Luliang district told AFP that many couples had done similarly.

- Few good men -

An advertisement for the 1,500-yuan reward sits among testimonies from happy clients in matchmaker Feng Yuping's office in Luliang.

Most of her clients are women, but the 48-year-old was pessimistic about the prospects of them finding a husband even with the new incentives.

"A man working at a state-owned enterprise might have a bachelor's degree, but he won't even look at a girl with a master's degree in the civil service," Feng said.

"There are still a lot of problems with men's attitudes towards marriage."

Feng said that often women are better educated, with a good job, but are rejected because of their age.

Some are turning off marriage altogether.

"Women now have their own stable income," Feng said. "They may be less interested in getting married. And there aren't many good men."

The result has been a decline in Luliang's population.

"The birth rate has dropped seriously," Feng said, citing examples of kindergartens closing because of lack of demand.

- Widespread incentives -

Luliang's predicament is common across China, with the ageing population a major preoccupation of Beijing.

The government released a report in October listing incentives similar to those in Luliang

Shangyou county in Jiangxi province has been giving out cash rewards for each family that has a second or third child, the report said.

Meanwhile, subsidies that can reach around 165,000 yuan for families with three children in Tianmen, Hubei province were credited by media with reversing a decline in birth rates last year -- though the data is still limited.

In Luliang, even those who said the new measures might encourage more couples to get hitched thought the perks were secondary to people's decision to marry or not.

"The cost of marriage for young people is indeed very high, and it is a factor," said Zhang.

"However, I believe that as long as young people are in love, they will inevitably walk down the aisle together."

M.Matsumoto--JT