Youngest are not interested in getting married in China, there has been a huge drop in the number of marriages since 1986

The 'Global Times' quoted Chinese experts as saying that due to the trend of late marriage, China's policy of allowing three children will be affected, which will increase the challenge to overcome population related problems.

Youngest are not interested in getting married in China, there has been a huge drop in the number of marriages since 1986
Youngest are not interested in getting married in China, image source: Beijing Review

The number of weddings in China has fallen to the lowest level in 36 years. In 2021, the registration of married couples has dropped to less than eight million or 8 million, the lowest since 1986. This information has been received from the latest official figures. This report has raised concerns about the declining birth rate and population decline in China. According to the latest 2021 Statistical Report on the Development of Civil Affairs, only 70.64 lakh couples registered for marriage across China last year, the lowest number since 1986.

According to the report, the number of couples getting married was 6.1 percent less in 2021 as compared to 2020. Statistics show that the number of marriages has registered a decline for the eighth year in a row. People aged 25 to 29 accounted for 35.3 percent of the married population last year, up 0.4 percent from 2020, making it the group with the highest proportion among all age groups marrying for the ninth year in a row. 

The 'Global Times' wrote that the trend of late marriage would affect China's policy of allowing three children, adding to the challenge of addressing population related problems. China allowed all couples to have two children in 2016, ending the decades-old 'one child' policy. Last year China passed an amended population and family planning law, allowing Chinese couples to have up to three children. 

Census data in China in 2020 showed that the country's population grew at the slowest pace.Experts have attributed the decline in the number of marriages and the trend of late marriages to longer years of schooling, increasing pressures of life and work, changing perceptions and attitudes of youth towards marriage