Beijing: One wife, many husbands. That's the solution to China's huge surplus of single men, says Xie Zuoshi, an economics professor at the Zhejing University of Finance and Economics, whose recent proposal to allow polyandry has gone viral.
Legalising
marriage between two men would also be a good idea, Xie wrote in a post that
has since been removed from his blogs. (He has at least three blogs, and his
Sina blog alone has more than 2.6 million followers.)
By 2020, China will have an estimated 30 million bachelors, called guanggun, or "bare branches." Birth control policies that since 1979 have limited many families to one child, a cultural preference for boys and the widespread, if illegal, practice of sex-selective abortion have contributed to a gender imbalance that hovers around 117 boys born for every 100 girls.
By 2020, China will have an estimated 30 million bachelors, called guanggun, or "bare branches." Birth control policies that since 1979 have limited many families to one child, a cultural preference for boys and the widespread, if illegal, practice of sex-selective abortion have contributed to a gender imbalance that hovers around 117 boys born for every 100 girls.
Though some could perhaps detect a touch of Jonathan Swift in the proposal, Xie
wrote that he was approaching the problem from a purely economic point of view.
Many men,
especially poor ones, he noted, are unable to find a wife and have children,
and are condemned to living and dying without offspring to support them in old
age, as children are required to do by law in China. But he believes there is a
solution.
A shortage
raises the price of goods, in this case, women, he explained. Rich men can
afford them, but poor men are priced out. This can be solved by having two men
share the same woman.
"With
so many guanggun, women are in short supply and their value increases," he
wrote. "But that doesn't mean the market can't be adjusted. The guanggun
problem is actually a problem of income. High-income men can find a woman
because they can pay a higher price. What about low-income men? One solution is
to have several take a wife together."
He added:
"That's not just my weird idea. In some remote, poor places, brothers
already marry the same woman, and they have a full and happy life."
Polyandry
has been practiced before in China, particularly in impoverished areas, as a
way to pool resources and avoid the breakup of property.
Yet much of
the online response to Xie's proposal has been outrage.
"Is
this a human being speaking?" a user with the handle dihuihui wrote on
Weibo.
"Trash-talking
professor, many single guys want to ask, 'Where's your wife?'" a user who
identified as Shanyu jinxiang1887003537 wrote.
Attempts to
contact Xie on Monday were unsuccessful.
On Sunday,
he published an indignant rebuttal on one of his blogs, accusing his critics of
being driven by empty notions of traditional morality that are impractical and
selfish, even hypocritical.
"Because
I promoted the idea that we should allow poor men to marry the same woman to
solve the problem of 30 million guanggun, I've been endlessly abused," he
wrote. "People have even telephoned my university to harass me. These
people have groundlessly accused me of promoting immoral and unethical ideas.
"If you
can't find a solution that doesn't violate traditional morality," he
continued, "then why do you criticise me for violating traditional
morality? You are in favour of a couple made up of one man, one woman. But your
morality will lead to 30 million guanggun with no hope of finding a wife. Is
that your so-called morality?"
In addition
to provoking guardians of traditional morality, the proposal has been pilloried
by feminists and gay rights advocates.
"Men
are publicly debating how to allocate women, as though women were commodities
like houses or cars, in order to realise some grand political ideal originating
from either the patriarchal left or the patriarchal right," Zheng Churan,
one of five women's rights activists detained in March, wrote in an essay for a
WeChat group called Groundbreaking.
"Behind
the imbalanced sex ratio of 30 million bachelors lie 30 million baby girls who
died due to sex discrimination. But somehow everyone's still crying that some
men can't find wives."
Xie also has
supporters. On his Sina blog, he posted a comment from a student at Nanchang
Hangkong University. "You are standing alongside the poorest working-class
people," the student wrote. "When there's no better way, why don't we
get rid of so-called morality and solve society's problems?
The New York Times
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