A new survey of China’s first generation born under the one-child policy has found they are more open but still conflicted about sex, and don’t approve of one-night stands.
With the world’s biggest population straining scarce land, water and energy, China has enforced rules limiting family size since the 1970s; generally limiting couples to having just one child, although there are exceptions.
The survey, carried out by the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences on people born between 1976 and 1986, found that their average age for first sexual experience was 22.8 years, the China Youth Daily said.
But more than 96 percent of the surveyed first had sex with their partner, rather than just a one-night stand. Nearly 20 percent first had sex before the age of 20.
The newspaper said:
The survey found that on the one hand they had sex earlier but on the other it was in a stable relationship, this shows the contradictions felt in the first generation of single children towards sex.
Most youths did not approve of one-night stands, and almost three-quarters said they would never try homosexuality, the report added.
Premarital sex and cohabitation were not generally felt to be problems, the survey found.
Still, more than 97 percent wanted children of their own, and 61 percent said that in an ideal world they would like to have two children.
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Posted by Jonathan in Anthropology, Sociology