Top Down Impositions of Cultural Norms and China’s Demography

The policy was both cruel and a blunder. Family-planning officials assumed that birth rates would spring back once controls were abolished. Alas, they re-educated parents too well. One child became the norm, certainly in cities. Consider another figure that should haunt leaders: 1.7. That is the number of children that, on average, Chinese women of child-bearing age call ideal. China’s ideal is one of the world’s lowest, far below the number given in Japan or South Korea. Chinese women born after 1995 want the fewest of all: 48.3% of them told the Chinese General Social Survey of 2021 that they desire one or no children. There is growing evidence that such attitudes are powerfully shaped by how people, and those around them, experienced the one-child policy.

https://www.economist.com/china/2024/03/21/chinas-low-fertility-trap

“The policy” refers to , of course, the infamous one child policy. Please read the entire article (assuming you can, because The Economist articles are often behind a paywall) – it is an eye-opener in many ways.

But my primary takeaway is how difficult it becomes to change culture, once it has been imposed. The last sentence of that excerpt is the worrying one, and not just in the case of China and the one-child policy.

Attitudes are indeed shaped by how experiences one has while growing up. And in the case of China and her demographics, it looks as if attitudes about families and (the number of) children will not be changing in a hurry, if at all.

India is, at best, twenty years away from where China (and most, if not all, of East Asia) is today. All the more reason to worry about India’s growth rates over the next two decades – her current demographic dividend is not a gift that will keep giving forever.

Row: Links for 18th December, 2019

  1. ““If a Chinese would come this road is done in a month,” explained Kenyan real estate entrepreneur George Hinga in a 2017 Vice China documentary. “With the Westerners,” he added, “the bureaucracy to get this approved would take a year, first of all, without any construction. I mean, why partner with the West?””
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    China full speed ahead in Africa.
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  2. A classic example of the seen and the unseen, from China and her implementation of the one child policy.
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  3. “In our prison example, for OPEC, and with the trade war, what is good for the group is not necessarily the individual’s “dominant strategy.” And that is why OPEC nations don’t necessarily listen to production quotas and the U.S. and China continue raising tariffs. Each one’s dominant strategy relates to their opponents rather than the benefits of cooperation.”
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    Elaine Schwartz on the USA, China and the prisoner’s dilemma.
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  4. “Xi sees that development economics as a discipline was largely created by Western economists using their own economies as a model, rather than being an indigenous creation of developing economies. “
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    Andrew Batson on a very early essay by Xi Jingping.
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  5. Speaking of unintended consequences…(with reference to number 2 above)