久久久无码人妻精品无码_6080YYY午夜理论片中无码_性无码专区_无码人妻品一区二区三区精99

English 中文網 漫畫網 愛新聞iNews 翻譯論壇
中國網站品牌欄目(頻道)
當前位置: Language Tips > 新聞選讀

奇葩言論:嬰兒出生率低是因為孩子越來越“沒用”
Children aren’t worth very much—that’s why we no longer make many

[ 2014-07-14 15:31] 來源:中國日報網     字號 [] [] []  
免費訂閱30天China Daily雙語新聞手機報:移動用戶編輯短信CD至106580009009

近幾十年來兒童出生率開始驟減,這個現象從西方逐漸蔓延到全球發達國家,而且也正在感染許多貧窮國家。

學者指出,兒童出生率降低是因為兒童的貢獻不如以前。

在社會轉型前,孩子是父母重要的財產。他們的勞動力成為了父母的商品,而且他們習慣嚴苛的管束和節儉的生活。父母不僅可以占據孩子兒時的勞動力,還可以占據他們成年后的財產。

社會轉型后,在大眾教育的影響下,兒童成為了獨立的個體。他們的個體地位上升,孩子不再是父母的勞動力,生活條件大大改善。與此同時孩子也逐漸變化成政府的財產,用來創造更多的社會價值。

奇葩言論:嬰兒出生率低是因為孩子越來越“沒用”

 

The nineteenth and twentieth centuries have been characterized by a massive decline in fertility, beginning in rich western countries and spreading all over the world. It is a transformation that is still underway in poor countries today.

Technological advances have, over the same period, radically decreased child mortality and increased life span. Modern parents need not have many children to ensure that one or two survive; almost all children survive to reproductive age. But Darwinian genetic interests cannot explain the modern decline in fertility (if Darwinian interests dominated, fertility should increase with increased survival, as observed in many historical elites). Rather, the fertility decline to present levels is mostly an economic response to the changing value of children, and to the changing economic relationship of parents and children. The economic transformation is not spontaneous, but the product of cultural transformation through education.

The economic value of children has decreased, but this is not the most important cause of the fertility decline. The transformation of countries from predominantly agricultural to predominantly urban reduced the value of children, especially where the industrial employment of children was restricted. Each child’s labor contributed positive value to a family farm or cottage industry, but in an urban setting, children began to have negative economic value. Indeed, the fertility decline correlates somewhat—though not perfectly—with the transformation from agrarian to city life.

But the fertility decline is not merely the product of a price effect of people having fewer children because children are more costly. Children are not normal goods (or even inferior goods, as might be surmised from low fertility among the highest income groups): they become not goods at all, but rather bundles of claims on their parents. This transformation is a culturally-controlled change in direction of the flow of resources. Before the fertility decline, resources flowed from children to parents (and even up to grandparents and kin); after the transformation, resources flowed from parents to children. In Mass education as a determinant of the timing of the fertility decline, John Caldwell argues that the vector of this cultural transformation has been mass education. He characterizes it as the replacement of “family morality,” in which children are expected to “work hard, demand little, and respect the authority of the old,” with “community morality,” in which children are dependent on their parents to become future productive citizens (perhaps even upwardly mobile) for the good of the country.

Caldwell identifies five mechanisms by which education reduces fertility by reshaping the economic relationship of parents and children. First, education reduces the ability of a child to work inside and outside the home – not just because school and studying take up time, but also because the child’s student status makes others reluctant to enforce traditional duties. Second, education increases the expense of raising a child, again not just because school is expensive, but because education increases a child’s demands on his parents for non-school expenses in a manner Caldwell describes as unprecedented. Third, education increases the dependency of children, reframing a formerly hard-working, productive child as primarily a future producer and citizen. Fourth, schooling speeds up cultural change and creates new cultures. Finally, fifth, in the developing world education specifically transmits the values of the Western middle class, which is contemptuous of traditional “family morality” as described above.

In each country, before the demographic transition, children were essentially the property of their parents. Their labor could be used for the parents’ good, and they were accustomed to strict and austere treatment. Parents had claims not only to their children’s labor in childhood, but even to their wealth in adulthood. To put it crudely, marrying a wife meant buying a slave factory, and children were valuable slaves.

After the transition, mediated by mass education, children were transubstantiated into persons. Their individual status increased, and parents no longer had a culturally recognized claim on their labor. Children’s culturally supported entitlements increased, including not only food and clothing, but also study and play time. Their relationship with their parents became more egalitarian and friendly, their treatment less strict.

But children do not exactly own themselves in the present situation: the government has claims on their future earnings, through taxation and other mandatory payments (and, increasingly, education loans). In essence, mass education is a communist transformation: individually-owned “goods” (children) are brought under national ownership, and returns from children flow to the country as a whole (through tax-based entitlement programs), rather than individually to their previous “owners.” When farms are communally owned, production suffers and famine results; when children are communally “owned,” fertility decline results. Social Security programs likely reflect this: the government provides (often poor quality) assistance to old people in place of their children, while undermining their direct claims on their children for assistance in old age.

There is another, related shift in the direction of resource flow during this time: resources (including labor) stop flowing from wives to husbands, and instead flow from husbands to wives, as a result of Western-style female liberation. This trend is also a result of education, and amplifies the trend toward low fertility. Since the emancipation of women frequently lags the child-parent economic transformation, it does not seem to be the first cause; Japan’s fertility decline occurred in the post-war 1940s, tracking the forced implementation of Western-style mass education, but women’s opportunities for education, professional employment, and political participation continue to be limited and were much more so in the 1940s, despite American-imposed female suffrage. Few would describe Japan in the 1940s as a hotbed of feminism and licentiousness, yet its fertility declined steeply and has not recovered since. 1

It does not seem that female emancipation was the primary cause of the fertility decline, although Caldwell details the many ways in which it amplifies the existing trend once established. It has long been noted by charitable organizations in poor countries that when resources are distributed directly to women, they are more likely to be spent on children’s needs, and when distributed to men, more likely to be spent on the men’s status and drug needs. Education and control of finances by women embrace and amplify the new flow of resources from parents to children, rather than children to parents. Educated children are expensive and demanding children, and an educated wife makes them more so. Higher education and labor force participation by women limits the time available for child bearing and rearing, especially during the more fertile periods of women’s lives.

Caldwell reports that the transition in Ghana was underway in the 1960s, and in many cases families had both children who had been to school and children who had not. Children who had been to school were treated drastically differently from their “illiterate siblings,” though they were often oblivious to this fact. That the transformation could be observed at this level—the treatment of children within the same family—suggests that changes in the status of children (expected to play, to devote time to studies, to be dependent on their parents) precede and underlie changes in gender roles.

Parental control of children’s sexuality and marriage does not last long once children have been transformed into persons, and with it goes the right to collect bride price, formerly a compensation for the burden of raising a female child. Even in dowry societies, dowry is increasingly supplemented or replaced with education, Caldwell notes, as a wealthy but uneducated woman is not seen as marriageable by Westernized elites. But this is only one aspect of the fertility transformation, rather than the prime driver; in a few countries, parental control over children’s marriage survived long after the fertility decline.

Industrialization negatively affected women’s productivity earlier than men’s productivity, usurping traditional female work from spinning and weaving to food production. The declining economic value of both women and children necessitated that they be granted symbolic value instead. The “cult of motherhood” beginning in the 1820s in England was a response to this – granting motherhood special status as a full-time occupation, and as a fulfilling life’s work. Similarly, as the economic value of children fell, their sacred value increased. Both of these value transformations are not spontaneously occurring, but culturally transmitted; and the vector for their transmission is mass Western-style education. Literature for the masses, from pamphlets of the 1820s to television, also plays a major role.

For many decades prior to the 1970s, the value of an adult (in terms of his productivity and real wages) rose; but the economic value of even an adult person has fallen in recent decades, as real wages attest. Fertility trends do not track the economic value of a human, as they might be expected to do if parents could realize a portion of the value of their offspring. Fertility trends can only respond to that share of the value of a person that a “producer of children” can recover – and the memetic transformation occasioned by mass education has essentially eliminated this share. Governments, meanwhile, claim an ever-larger share of their citizens’ resources. And accessing parental money by catering to (and creating, if necessary) the “needs” of children remains a profitable business plan.

So why did people used to have children? It’s hard for us even to imagine, but children used to be valuable—they used to be much more like slaves or farm animals, which are both very valuable. They were also treated much more like slaves, with patriarchs (at least) maintaining distance from children, as Caldwell notes. Consider the history of the study, compared to the lowly and shameful “man cave,” for a sense of the old style of family relations. A wife was not only a valuable RealDoll, but also a valuable slave factory. Making a new “person”—on which the state has claims, but you do not, and toward whom you have (class-dependent) obligations—is a much less economically attractive proposition than making a new slave.

 

(來源:Quartz? 編輯:丹妮)

 

 
中國日報網英語點津版權說明:凡注明來源為“中國日報網英語點津:XXX(署名)”的原創作品,除與中國日報網簽署英語點津內容授權協議的網站外,其他任何網站或單位未經允許不得非法盜鏈、轉載和使用,違者必究。如需使用,請與010-84883631聯系;凡本網注明“來源:XXX(非英語點津)”的作品,均轉載自其它媒體,目的在于傳播更多信息,其他媒體如需轉載,請與稿件來源方聯系,如產生任何問題與本網無關;本網所發布的歌曲、電影片段,版權歸原作者所有,僅供學習與研究,如果侵權,請提供版權證明,以便盡快刪除。
 

關注和訂閱

人氣排行

翻譯服務

中國日報網翻譯工作室

我們提供:媒體、文化、財經法律等專業領域的中英互譯服務
電話:010-84883468
郵件:translate@chinadaily.com.cn
 
 
久久久无码人妻精品无码_6080YYY午夜理论片中无码_性无码专区_无码人妻品一区二区三区精99

    性生活免费在线观看| 免费看日b视频| 免费视频爱爱太爽了| 黄色三级视频片| 男人的天堂avav| 制服丝袜中文字幕第一页 | aa在线免费观看| 久久久一二三四| 黄色一级一级片| 99久热在线精品视频| 最新天堂在线视频| 波多野结衣50连登视频| 欧美三级午夜理伦三级老人| 欧美伦理视频在线观看| 福利视频一二区| 国产又大又长又粗又黄| 日韩av卡一卡二| 日本精品www| 欧美人成在线观看| 亚洲五码在线观看视频| 在线能看的av网站| 狠狠97人人婷婷五月| 欧美激情亚洲天堂| 日本一区二区三区四区五区六区| 我看黄色一级片| 午夜视频在线瓜伦| 男女午夜激情视频| 欧美久久久久久久久久久久久 | 成年人视频观看| av在线免费观看国产| 9l视频自拍9l视频自拍| 亚洲黄色av片| 国产无色aaa| 天堂网在线免费观看| 成人久久久久久久久| 激情五月宗合网| 久久久性生活视频| 欧美精品久久久久久久免费| 无码熟妇人妻av在线电影| 大地资源网在线观看免费官网| 自拍偷拍视频在线| 黄色免费高清视频| 秋霞在线一区二区| 亚洲高潮无码久久| 欧美一区二区三区综合| 999久久欧美人妻一区二区| 91精品国产吴梦梦| 成人一区二区av| 妞干网视频在线观看| 日韩极品视频在线观看| 野外做受又硬又粗又大视频√| 国产免费裸体视频| 久久精品xxx| 日本www在线播放| 久久美女福利视频| 一区二区xxx| 国产三级生活片| 亚洲第一精品区| 四虎4hu永久免费入口| 国产va亚洲va在线va| a在线视频观看| 97xxxxx| 日韩免费高清在线| 妓院一钑片免看黄大片| 日本中文字幕影院| 免费观看国产视频在线| 国产免费内射又粗又爽密桃视频| 成人免费性视频| 成人羞羞国产免费网站| 中文字幕第80页| 日韩精品在线播放视频| av在线免费观看国产| 日韩中文字幕三区| 日本xxxx黄色| 亚洲最新免费视频| 亚洲熟妇无码一区二区三区导航| wwwxxx黄色片| wwwwwxxxx日本| wwwjizzjizzcom| 国产精品97在线| 日韩av一卡二卡三卡| 波多野结衣av一区二区全免费观看| 亚洲欧洲日产国码无码久久99 | 黄色录像特级片| 久激情内射婷内射蜜桃| 黄色av免费在线播放| 日本高清免费在线视频| av网站大全免费| 国产精品入口免费软件| 中国黄色录像片| 国产一区视频免费观看| 亚洲天堂伊人网| 日韩av在线播放不卡| 小泽玛利亚视频在线观看| 亚洲国产一二三精品无码| 精品免费国产一区二区| 最新av在线免费观看| 青青草原av在线播放| 日韩高清在线一区二区| 日韩av三级在线| 午夜xxxxx| 亚洲乱码中文字幕久久孕妇黑人| 深爱五月综合网| 国产99久久九九精品无码| 污视频在线观看免费网站| 欧美精品一区免费| 可以在线看黄的网站| 四季av一区二区| 国产成人亚洲综合无码| 亚洲36d大奶网| 91精品国产91久久久久麻豆 主演| 性猛交ⅹ×××乱大交| 男人用嘴添女人下身免费视频| 欧美精品色视频| 欧美性猛交久久久乱大交小说| 黄色特一级视频| 国产乱码一区二区三区四区| 每日在线更新av| 成人av在线播放观看| 999这里有精品| 亚洲精品高清无码视频| 加勒比成人在线| 国产又粗又大又爽的视频| 午夜激情福利在线| 91视频最新入口| 久久精品无码中文字幕| 免费观看黄色的网站| 天天操天天爱天天爽| 欧美亚洲国产成人| 东北少妇不带套对白| 四虎精品欧美一区二区免费| 日韩av片专区| 一级特黄性色生活片| aⅴ在线免费观看| 国产玉足脚交久久欧美| 四虎4hu永久免费入口| 911av视频| 亚洲一级片av| 日韩在线一区视频| 8x8x最新地址| 91淫黄看大片| 黄色一级大片在线观看| av磁力番号网| 日韩va在线观看| 亚洲一区二区蜜桃| 成人在线看视频| 日韩精品―中文字幕| 97免费视频观看| 91视频 - 88av| 日本a在线天堂| 日本天堂免费a| 国产精品自拍合集| 97免费视频观看| 激情小视频网站| 欧美日韩福利在线| 一卡二卡三卡视频| 久久99中文字幕| 欧美成人三级在线视频| 黄色一级在线视频| 日韩中文字幕三区| 久久久久久香蕉| 国产三级三级三级看三级| 能在线观看的av网站| 高清一区在线观看| www.色欧美| 亚洲男人天堂2021| 黄色网址在线免费看| 日本一二三区视频在线| 久草视频这里只有精品| 黄页免费在线观看视频| 91黄色小网站| 国产精品入口免费软件| 性生活免费在线观看| 激情久久综合网| 只有这里有精品| 99在线免费视频观看| 国产成人a亚洲精v品无码| 国产成人精品视频ⅴa片软件竹菊| 成人免费在线观看视频网站| 亚洲免费成人在线视频| 欧美日韩亚洲国产成人| 精品视频在线观看一区二区| 青青草成人免费在线视频| 大肉大捧一进一出好爽视频| 国产资源在线视频| 天天操狠狠操夜夜操| 天天做天天干天天操| 91亚洲一区二区| h无码动漫在线观看| 成年人黄色片视频| www.国产视频.com| 无码人妻aⅴ一区二区三区日本| 亚洲熟妇无码av在线播放| 免费在线观看毛片网站| 亚洲精品www.| 日韩视频在线视频| 中文字幕第88页| 日本一区午夜艳熟免费| 黄色aaa级片| 大地资源网在线观看免费官网|