Los Angeles Times

China’s latest threat? The DINKs

More couples forgo having offspring though one-child policy is history

- By Stephanie Yang

TAIPEI, Taiwan — Shorthand for gainfully employed U.S. couples whose only responsibi­lities were to themselves, the acronym DINK — dual income, no kids — was coined to capture the unabashed materialis­m of the 1980s.

Four decades later, the term has made a comeback, with millennial­s embracing it on social media to flaunt their free time, lavish spending habits and the other perks of choosing to be child-free.

It has taken off far beyond the United States, including in one country where it would have been hard to imagine just a decade ago: China.

China infamously once limited couples to one child each to control population growth. That led to a shortage of young people, and in 2016 the government upped the limit to two children. In 2021, it became three.

Amid deep economic uncertaint­y, a growing number of Chinese are opting for another number: zero.

Many proudly refer to themselves as DINKs — using the acronym in English — or dingke, the phonetic translatio­n in Mandarin.

Xu Kaikai, 29, said being DINKs gives her and her 36year-old boyfriend a greater sense of control over their lives.

“It reduces some of the anxieties about age,” she said.

She works in advertisin­g in Shanghai, where her boyfriend is a project manager for a constructi­on com

pany. “I used to talk about having a beautiful baby,” Xu said.

Now she calls herself a “drifting leaf” and gets so bored with people talking about children on social media that she follows only people without them.

A recent study from the Luoyang Institute of Science and Technology estimated that DINKs accounted for about 38% of Chinese households in 2020 — up from 28% a decade earlier — but those figures included large numbers of people living alone and the research did not look at whether couples were in fact dual-income.

Not that all Chinese adhere to a strict definition of the acronym. Some include anybody without children, while others don’t count people who still have a chance to change their minds — women of childbeari­ng age or men without vasectomie­s.

It’s also unclear how many DINKs there are in the United States. Some 44% of couples ages 18 to 49 surveyed by Pew Research in 2021 said it was unlikely they would have children — up from 37% in 2018.

The term DINK isn’t entirely new in China, but previously it was usually intended to indicate couples who wanted children but could not — not the childless-by-choice ethos couples are embracing today.

“It was just a high-class phenomenon,” said Yuying Tong, a professor of sociology at the Chinese University of Hong Kong who studies family life.

She said the number of DINKs is going up in large part because more people are delaying marriage.

The rejection of societal norms comes at an inopportun­e time for the Communist Party, which is struggling to stave off a demographi­c crisis in which there aren’t enough young people to support the elderly.

The country’s population declined for the second year in a row in 2023 — India surpassed it as the world’s most populous nation — and the birthrate fell 5.6% to a record low of 6.39 births per 1,000 people — a little more than half the U.S. rate, which has also declined in recent years.

Now the Chinese government is trying to motivate people to have kids, resorting to subsidies and even matchmakin­g services.

In March, Chinese officials announced plans to provide more support for child rearing and “work toward a birth-friendly society,” including improving parental leave policies and child-care options.

The government also appears to be trying to scare DINKs into changing their mindset.

China’s Twitter-like platform Weibo recently promoted an article about dingke who regretted not having kids because it had led to loneliness, marital strife or inheritanc­e issues.

“Being a DINK is a gamble on the future,” said the post, which had no byline but got more than 8 million views. “It’s a bet on whether you can stick to your original intention, on whether partners can trust each other, and more importantl­y on the complex changes of human nature.”

DINKs took issue with the characteri­zation.

“Are all these examples being brought up to encourage people to have kids?” a popular entertainm­ent blogger who goes by the moniker Jing Zhao Cha Mi responded on social media. “There are probably more people who regret their lifestyle with children.”

Hu Huiwen, a 38-year-old financial consultant who lives in the eastern city of Hangzhou, has heard all the warnings: Her husband will leave her. She will want children later and be too old to have them. Nobody will care for her in her old age.

But in the five years since she swore off having children, none of that has come to pass.

“It might become a minor sorrow, but not to the point of regret,” Hu said. “Even if I do regret it, then I can only bear it myself. What else can you do?”

She belongs to three group chats for DINKs, where members offer advice on how to spend their leisure time. In video diaries, she shows herself reading or wandering through parks admiring the foliage.

Such advertisem­ents for child-free life don’t make the government campaign for having children any easier. Neither does the stalling economy.

A recent study by the Beijing-based Yuwa Population Research Institute found that the average cost of raising a child in China was $74,600 — or 6.3 times the per capita GDP.

Of the 14 countries included in the study, the only place where it cost more relative to income was South Korea, which has the lowest birthrate in the world.

“At the end of the day, it’s still about the pressures and this very competitiv­e environmen­t that makes both marriage and childbeari­ng untenable,” said Mu Zheng, an assistant professor of sociology at the National University of Singapore.

When Zheng Yu, a 47year-old fashion consultant living in Shanghai, was in her 20s, her friends and family viewed her decision to not have children as a symptom of her rebellious nature.

Now with income inequality rising and seeing the pressure her niece is under to excel, she said she and her husband would make the same decision all over again.

“Only by not having children can I live the way I do now,” said Zheng, who has visited more than 50 countries. “I only have to think about myself, which is the part I enjoy most.”

“Considerin­g global political and economic trends, if you don’t have a strong maternal instinct, you shouldn’t have a child just for the sake of it,” she said.

Vable Liu, a 29-year-old English teacher in Jinan, the capital of China’s Shandong province, said about a third of her friends are DINKs.

Liu and her husband recently posted a short video defending their choice.

“Will DINKs miss out on the joy of children?” she asks him in the clip.

They answer together: “Are people with children surely happy? People with children aren’t necessaril­y happy, maybe they’ll miss out on the joy of being DINKs.”

They continued with their mock interview.

“What if your family pressures you?” “Stay away from them.”

“Who do you pass your wealth on to when you die?” “Squander it all before then.”

 ?? Mark Schiefelbe­in Associated Press ?? CHINA abandoned its one-child policy years ago, raising the limit to two children in 2016. In 2021, it became three. But a growing number of Chinese are making the choice to remain childless amid economic uncertaint­y.
Mark Schiefelbe­in Associated Press CHINA abandoned its one-child policy years ago, raising the limit to two children in 2016. In 2021, it became three. But a growing number of Chinese are making the choice to remain childless amid economic uncertaint­y.
 ?? Greg Baker Associated Press ?? A STUDY found the average cost of raising a child in China is $74,600 — or 6.3 times the per capita GDP.
Greg Baker Associated Press A STUDY found the average cost of raising a child in China is $74,600 — or 6.3 times the per capita GDP.

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