Chinese village caps betrothal gifts at US$2,900 so that ‘leftover men’ can afford to get married
Policy aims to take financial pressure off bachelors and help them find wives
A village in northern China is trying to take the financial pressure off bachelors who cannot afford to get married by capping betrothal gifts at 20,000 yuan (US$2,900), a local newspaper reports.
Initially the new policy stated that anyone who spent more than that amount on wedding gifts in the village in Shijiazhuang, Hebei province, could face consequences on a par with fraud or even human trafficking charges, Hebei Youth Daily reported on Wednesday.
But after an outcry online, county party officials told the village to change its policy to remove the fraud and human trafficking part.
A village official confirmed that the policy had been toned down, telling The Beijing News on Thursday that the clause had been removed because it had no legal basis, but the cap remained.
Other village rules include a maximum spend on wedding meals of 260 yuan per table, with alcohol capped at 30 yuan per group and cigarettes at 10 yuan, according to Liang Huabin, an official with Daan sixth village.
He added that the policy had been introduced to help the many unmarried men in the village find wives.