Volume 31 - Article 45 | Pages 1337–1364 Author has provided data and code for replicating results

The gender divide in urban China: Singlehood and assortative mating by age and education

By Yue Qian, Zhenchao Qian

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Date received:28 Mar 2014
Date published:04 Dec 2014
Word count:6835
Keywords:age, China, gender
DOI:10.4054/DemRes.2014.31.45
Additional files:readme.31-45 (text file, 1 kB)
 demographic-research.31-45 (zip file, 137 kB)
 

Abstract

Objective: Chinese media labels highly educated, urban women who are still single in their late 20s as "leftover ladies". We investigate whether indeed highly educated women are less likely to marry than their less-educated counterparts, and how assortative mating patterns by age and education play a role in singleness.

Methods: We use data from the urban samples of the Chinese General Social Surveys in the 2000s. In the analysis we calculate marriage rates to examine the likelihood of entry into marriage, and then apply log-linear models to investigate the assortative mating patterns by age and education.

Results: We find that as education increases, the likelihood of marriage increases among men but decreases among women, especially among those over age 30. The results from log-linear models reveal that more marriages involve better-educated, older men and less-educated, younger women.

Conclusions: We argue that persistent traditional gender roles, accompanied by the rapid rise in women's education, contribute to low marriage rates among older, highly educated women.

Author's Affiliation

Yue Qian - University of British Columbia, Canada [Email]
Zhenchao Qian - Brown University, United States of America [Email]

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