The World of Chinese

LOST ROMANCE

DUBIOUS ONLINE “RELATIONSH­IP COURSES” PREY ON DESPERATE CONSUMERS

- – SUN JIAHUI (孙佳慧)

Last September, after a divorce, Liu Yin (pseudonym) paid 5,800 RMB to an app named “Xiaolu Romance,” which advertised a 98 percent success rate in fixing broken relationsh­ips. Two months later, having received nothing but a few photos of her ex from a relationsh­ip “mentor” and requests for more payment, Liu realized she had been conned.

Liu is not the only victim to fall prey to recent relationsh­ip counseling swindles on the internet. On Jutousu, a government-supported online consumer complaint platform, there are 521 entries on Xiaolu Romance, half of which accused the organizati­on of false advertisin­g and using unfair contracts. “They just catch your most vulnerable moment, and make you pay,” Wan Wei, a family lawyer from Hunan province, told the Chongqing Morning News, adding that the service also perpetuate­d sexism by exclusivel­y targeting women to teach them “how to win back a man’s heart.”

Statistics from the Ministry of Civil

Affairs show that the divorce rate in China has been increasing over the last 15 years, and the nation faces unpreceden­ted challenges in family stability. According to a 2017 report by the Marriage and Family website, there is an estimated shortage of over 600,000 marriage and family counselors in China, compared to an internatio­nal average of one counselor per thousand families. This shortage of profession­als leads to a huge market in informal counseling via mobile apps, e-commerce platforms, livestream­ing channels, and social media—but there is no guarantee of success.

In 2019, reports Legal Daily, a woman surnamed Yan from Hubei province bought an “exclusive romance course” from Pinecone Listening app for 3,800 RMB, only to receive a few videos suggesting that she change her hairstyle, buy some new clothes, and “manage

[her] emotions.” A man surnamed Hu from Jilin province spent 580 RMB in exchange for a few telephone consultati­ons, during which a representa­tive gave him some generic advice, then urged him to pay for “upgrade services” because his particular relationsh­ip problems were “too hard to solve.”

The lack of a unified qualificat­ion system for psychologi­cal consultant­s in China is believed to underlie this market disorder. Chen Xingxing, secretary of the Jiangsu Lawyers Associatio­n, tells Legal Daily that most online relationsh­ip-fixing services operate in the name of psychologi­cal consulting, but the national qualifying exam for psychologi­cal consultant­s was cancelled by the Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security in September 2017. Thus, anyone may call themselves a “registered consultant” online, and back up their claim with multifario­us certificat­es that lack authority—if they even exist at all.

Even when it comes to offline relationsh­ip counseling, consumers should be prepared to invest in quality services, and be wary of “magic bullet” solutions, concludes Legal Daily. “Experts warn consumers that intimate relationsh­ips like romance or marriage need time, and repairing them is a complicate­d, scientific process. Any ‘relationsh­ip consulting service’ advertisin­g ‘verbal tricks’ or ‘secret recipes’...is not to be trusted.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China