January19, 2007:
China is facing some interesting manpower problems. For over a
generation, China has been making strenuous efforts to reduce the birth rate.
China has 1.3 billion people, and it was obvious that a larger population could
not be supported. As a result, the birth rate is now down to 1.7 (1.7 children,
on average, per woman.) The United States rate is 2.06, and the world average
is 2.5. The "replacement rate" (the number needed to keep the population
stable) is 2.1. Thus, if China maintains its current birth rate, the population
will slowly shrink during the 21st century.
But
there's a catch, a rather interesting one. Many Chinese couple, particularly
those living in urban areas, were restricted to one child. Culturally, the
Chinese prefer males (as a form of birth control, since men cannot give birth,
and can produce more food on a farm). Gender detection technology became
available for pregnant women over the last few decades, and that led to many
female fetuses being aborted. As a result, 118 boys are now being born for every
100 girls. In some areas, it's 130 boys for every hundred girls. Some children of
the "gender selection" era have come of age, and the boys are noticing that
there are not enough potential wives to go around. As a result, women from
neighboring countries are being enticed into China, to marry desperate Chinese
men. The neighboring countries are none to happy with this situation. Some of
the young women are being kidnapped, or enticed under false pretences. Now it's
not likely that any of China's neighbors are going to declare war on China over
this, but it does make for unhappy neighbors.
Another
interesting side-effect is that the wife shortage makes military service more
attractive. Traditionally, Chinese soldiers tended to be single.The
military has recently become more attractive to less educated men, because it's
a job with decent pay and benefits. On the other end of the scale, the military
is less attractive, for an educated man can make much more money in the booming
civilian economy. The more educated fellows are also more likely to find a
wife. Thus the guys who are less educated and talented are going to left
without a wife, or at least without a Chinese one. China has traditionally
encouraged men to marry, as it tends to keep them out of trouble. Now China is
creating millions of young men who cannot get married, cannot get in the
military (which is selective, and shrinking in size), and are not terribly
happy about the situation. But at least the long feared population explosion
was avoided. What all those antsy young men will do is another matter, that is
still undetermined.