Child marriage is driven by gender inequality and the belief that women and girls are somehow inferior to men and boys.
There is very limited information on child marriage in China, however there is evidence to suggest that child marriage is driven by:
Demographics: a growing number of reports point out that the significant gender imbalance caused by China’s one child policy and gender selective abortion has resulted in an increase of child marriage and trafficking.
Bride trafficking:in vulnerable households, girls are seen as an “economic asset” to be sold as a child bride. Many families are also willing to buy a trafficked bride from neighbouring countries. For example, a 2016 study by the UN Action for Cooperation against Trafficking in Persons highlights cases of young Cambodian girls being trafficked to China to marry. There are also reports of young girls from Vietnam being forcibly married there. In 2019, Human Rights Watch reported cases of bride trafficking from Kachin and Shan states (Myanmar) into China.
COVID-19: The pandemic has had a negative impact on the rights of girls and women in China, and in some cases made them more vulnerable to forms of violence, such as child marriage. For example,during China’s travel lockdown, domestic violence against women in China leapt by two to three times in some areas, according to an anti-domestic violence organisation, amid rising economic and domestic strains. Survivors also had fewer options for escape and weaker social support.