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China population: county sparks uproar by telling ‘leftover’ women to marry unemployed men

  • Yihuang county in Jiangxi province is encouraging women to marry unemployed men, with offers of special training and treatment for potential husbands
  • China is grappling with a declining marriage and birth rate, which has prompted a flurry of policies from local governments to address the issues

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Newly-wed couples attend a group wedding ceremony in traditional Han Dynasty style in Jiangxi province. Photo: Reuters

A county in central China has sparked controversy by offering a host of incentives to encourage “leftover” women to marry, including with unemployed men, local media have reported, amid rising concern about the country’s dwindling birth rate.

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Yihuang county in Jiangxi province is offering preferential treatment for housing and employment, as well as birth allowances, to women and their partners, according to a report from Shanghai-based media The Paper.

“At present, the phenomenon of ‘older young female cadres and workers’ remaining single in our county has become a very prominent problem, which urgently needs the care, help and support of the whole society,” the county government reportedly said in a document, referring to women older than 26.

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More controversially, authorities are trying to encourage women to marry unemployed men by promising their husbands vocational and entrepreneurship training, business loans and priority for public service positions.

The proposal has been slammed online, with women questioning why it was a problem if they chose not to marry.

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