A report released here Thursday said there will be 30 million
more males of marriageable age in China than females by the year
2020, which will make it difficult for men to find wives.
The report, issued by the State Population and Family Planning
Commission, said China's sex ratio for newborn babies in 2005 was
118 boys to 100 girls, compared with 110:100 in 2000. In some
regions, the sex ratio has reached 130:100.
"Discrimination against the female sex remains the primary cause
of China's growing gender imbalance," said Liu Bohong, vice
director of the women studies institute under the All-China Women's
Federation.
Liu said that rural people in China are widely believed to be
more "traditional", preferring sons to daughters, but the newborn
gender imbalance is also widening in cities.
The Chinese capital Beijing saw 109 boys born for every 100
girls in the first 11 months of 2006.
Some couples, with a traditional preference for boys and only
one chance to have a child, opt for abortion when they find out
their unborn child is female. Many Chinese localities have outlawed
fetus gender diagnosis to prevent the trend.
The report predicted that in the year 2020, Chinese men of
marriageable age will find it difficult to find wives, especially
those with low income or little education. This will create social
instability.
Liu said the sex ratio imbalance was not connected to China's
family planning policy. "It is more a result of the deep-rooted
notion in Chinese culture that men are superior to women," she
said.
In an attempt to halt the growing imbalance, China launched a
"care for girls" campaign nationwide in 2000 to promote the belief
that men and women are equal. The government has also offered cash
incentives to girl-only families in the countryside. But these
policies have not had their desired effect.
Experts believe China still has a long way to go before women
can enjoy the same social resources and opportunities as men.
(Xinhua News Agency January 12, 2007)
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