The Star Malaysia

Marriage not Gen Z priority

Younger lot less eager when it comes to tying the knot

- — China Daily/ann

BEIJING: As Niulang and Zhinyu (the cowherd and weaver lady) celebrated their annual reunion on Qixi Festival (Chinese Valentine’s Day), young Chinese people seem to be disconsola­te about being alone.

Tian Xiao, 32, received a message on Tuesday morning that the matchmakin­g party she registered for during the Qixi Festival yesterday had been cancelled due to tighter Covid-19 restrictio­ns here.

“It’s disappoint­ing because I will spend the romantic night alone,” she said with a wry smile.

Working at a primary school, Tian said most of her colleagues were women, so she planned to get to know some men at the party.

Though yearning for love and romance, the younger generation has shown less enthusiasm for marriage.

The latest figures from the Ministry of Civil Affairs show that the nation’s marriage rate has seen a continuous decline from 2013.

About 8.13 million couples got married in 2020, a decline of 12.2% year-on-year. The number was as high as 13.47 million back in 2013.

However, the divorce rate has registered a rise, climbing to 3.73 million couples last year while only 580,000 couples chose to end their marriage back in 1987.

“It’s because of the high price of housing and the future cost of education for children. It’s really hard to cover them all by myself,” Tian said, explaining her reasons to get married.

“But my friends told me that my standards for a future husband are a bit high, as he needs to have hukou (household registrati­on) in Beijing and an apartment in the city.

“That’s the reality, I need some assurance for my future life. Marriage is different from just having a romantic relationsh­ip. An ample material life is a must for marriage or it won’t last very long, at least to me.

“I will marry the one that suits me, no matter how old I am. Marriage is not makeshift but the icing on the cake,” she said.

Tian is not alone. More young people prefer later marriage. A recent report by a research team under Ren Zeping, a former economist with the Developmen­t Research Center of the State Council, showed that the group aged 25 to 29 has become the main force for marriage, accounting for 34.6% of newlyweds in 2019, up 0.3 percentage points from 2005.

The previous mainstay for marriage, the group aged between 20 and 24, however, saw a sharp decrease to 19.7% of the total newlyweds in 2019.

The group accounted for almost half of all newlyweds back in 2005 at about 47%.

Except for unaffordab­le housing prices and high education costs, the younger generation’s stronger sense of independen­ce has also dampened their enthusiasm for marriage.

A report by online matchmakin­g agency Zhen’ai in May showed that finding it hard to fall in love, having high standards for potential partners and having an unsociable character were the three major reasons so many remained single.

However, the nation’s younger generation is far from discourage­d.

The report said nearly 80% of those surveyed registered with matchmakin­g social networks, and 40% said they worked hard to increase their wealth in order to be more attractive to potential partners.

 ?? — China daily/ann ?? Picking up a new skill: young women learning to make fruit cakes in Huaibei, anhui province, as part of the Qixi Festival celebratio­n.
— China daily/ann Picking up a new skill: young women learning to make fruit cakes in Huaibei, anhui province, as part of the Qixi Festival celebratio­n.

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