1. Exorbitant traditional bride prices remain a pervasive economic hurdle in rural China, trapping young rural men in a cycle of financial strain that dampens their desire to marry and have children. [para. 1]2. According to a study published in Economic Modelling, men from regions with steep bride prices have significantly lower expectations and desires for marriage and childbirth, particularly among those in their late twenties. [para. 2] The financial pressure prolongs their time as migrant workers, forces them into riskier informal employment, and delays family formation and career progression. [para. 3]3. Authored by Cai Wenxi and Zhang Dandan, the study focuses on a core sample of 1,338 unmarried male migrants aged 16–29, providing recent evidence on marriage and fertility challenges facing migrant gig workers. [para. 4]4. Driven by a skewed gender ratio, female migration to developed regions, and rising marriage costs after market reforms, bride prices have ballooned into a crippling burden for rural Chinese men. [para. 5] Prices are dictated by regional norms with minor variations within areas. [para. 6] Bride prices surged around 2006 and more than doubled by the late 2010s; from 2013 to 2018 the average was 46,861 yuan ($6,892), while surveyed workers saved an average of 21,096 yuan per year, meaning it would take roughly six years to accumulate the bride price excluding housing. [para. 7]5. This financial barrier places disadvantaged rural men at a severe disadvantage in the marriage market, leading to delayed marriages and diminished desire for children. [para. 8] While 76% of the sample expressed a desire to marry and 81% wished to have children, actual expectations were markedly lower: among those willing to marry, over 30% believed their chance of marrying before age 30 was 50% or less; among those unwilling, over 30% saw zero chance of ever marrying, and nearly 40% believed they had zero chance of becoming parents by age 30. Roughly 20% reported being in a stable relationship. [para. 9]6. For every 100,000 yuan increase in hometown bride price, a man’s self-rated probability of marrying before 30 drops by 5.88 percentage points, and the probability of having children before 30 drops by 5.37 percentage points. [para. 10] Willingness to marry and have children declines with age, especially after 25; for 29-year-old respondents, each 10,000 yuan increase reduces the probability of wanting to marry by 1.3 percentage points. [para. 11]7. Education level correlates with marital prospects: only 18% of the sample held a junior college degree or higher; respondents with lower education from high-bride-price regions showed the lowest willingness to marry and have children. [para. 12]8. Soaring marriage costs also affect labor market choices. Under average housing pressure, every 100,000 yuan increase in bride price prolongs a worker’s migration period by 4.27 months. [para. 13] Workers from high-bride-price areas are more likely to take informal, daily-wage gig work that lacks labor protections and job security. [para. 14] As manufacturing digitalizes, the burden on low-skilled rural youth may worsen, and the influx into the gig economy increases economic instability and further curbs their ability to meet marriage costs. [para. 15]9. Field research in the Yangtze and Pearl River deltas observed that many rural gig workers have a weak desire to marry or have children and often lack interest in stable relationships, prioritizing short-term needs. [para. 16] Researchers are studying interventions such as pension insurance to foster long-term planning, but note this is a massive structural issue with limited impact from micro-level measures alone. [para. 16]AI generated, for reference only
Soaring Bride Prices Push Rural Chinese Men Out of the Marriage Market, Study Shows
A new study reveals that steep traditional payments for marriage are not only deterring young rural men from starting families but also reshaping their labor choices









