Though marriage is still divine, Cupid has found it much harder
to shoot the arrow in Taiwan.
About 24.5 percent of young people aged between 20 and 39 who
did not want to marry rose to 24.5 percent in 2005 from 16 percent
in 2004, according to media reports reaching here Monday from
Taipei.
Local media quoted a survey results released on Monday as saying
that more and more young Taiwanese choose to stay single all their
lives given "economic causes" and difficulty to find another half,
according to the results of a recent survey conducted by local
health promotion bureau.
The poll, conducted by telephone in September 2005, found that
though the reasons for opting to remain single varied, 35.9 percent
of men aged between 20 and 39 in Taiwan cited "economic causes" as
the major reason keeping them from tying their knots.
Meanwhile, 21.9 percent of women aged 20 and 39 said their
choose to stay away from wedlock because "marriage will compromise
my single life."
Some respondents during the survey said they opted for celibacy
because they had not met their Mr. or Ms. Right, while some others
said that "marriage involves too much trouble."
The poll found that 58.2 percent of the men and women would like
to get married if they had suitable partners. This figure was 3.3
percentage points lower than the figure obtained in a similar poll
conducted in 2004.
(Xinhua News Agency August 1, 2006)