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China ends 9-year decline in new marriages in 2023, but divorces also climb

  • The country registers 7.68 million newlywed couples, up 845,000 from the previous year in what analysts say is sign of post-pandemic wedding rebound
  • The data comes amid concerns about the country’s plunging birth rate and worries that its 1.4 billion population could be ageing faster than expected

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To boost birth rates and encourage marriage, Chinese authorities have offered incentives to encourage couples to have bigger families. Photo: AFP
China ended a nine-year streak of declining marriage registrations last year, with the number of newlywed couples rising to 7.68 million, according to data released by the Ministry of Civil Affairs on Friday.
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This was an increase of 845,000 unions compared to the number registered in 2022.

He Yafu, an independent demographer, said a key reason for the rebound in registrations last year was that many young people had to delay marriage because of the Covid-19 pandemic.

“As the pandemic gradually ends, the wedding industry has rebounded significantly, and there was a hot wave of consumption during the 2023 Mid-Autumn Festival and National Day holidays,” He said in a blog post on Saturday, referring to a spike in spending during the eight-day holiday break in September and October last year.

Wedding-related spending on gold jewellery remains strong, according to a white paper this month by China Wedding Expo about industry trends.

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However, overall spending on wedding banquets dropped by 10 to 15 per cent year over year in 2023, it said.

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