Archive for August, 2007

Oldest Profession Flourishes in China

Monday, August 6th, 2007

The Washington Post has published a well researched article on prostitution in China, illustrating the connection between China’s bounding economy and the rise in the number of sex workers. As more women enter the field, prices for services are plummeting. The article, Oldest Profession Flourishes in China, begins with the story of a 22 year freelance prostitute working in Beijing:

By the time she came to Beijing last June, the market price for women like her was $20. With a couple of customers a day, she could make $1,350 a month, save most of her earnings and still send money home, she said. But now, because of increased competition from younger workers newly arrived from the countryside, her price has dropped to $13.

“I’m getting older,” she said over a simple dinner of vegetables and spicy chicken in a Beijing suburb, a slim gold ring on each middle finger. “Though the price has gone down, the number of customers is up. I used to receive two visitors before, and now I have three to four a day. My income is the same, I just have to work a little harder.”

No longer limited to well-known bars or a growing number of karaoke parlors, prostitutes are everywhere in China today, branching out onto college campuses, moving into private residential compounds and approaching customers on mobile phone networks.

In some spots, the article really gets to the heart of the matter. It points out that the rise in prostitution does not necessarily correspond to a decline in values, in fact “the majority of prostitutes have violated old social mores out of desperation to help their families.”

Jing Jun, a sociology and AIDS policy professor at Tsinghua University, is quoted in the article as saying:

“They are absolutely moral. A lot of these women send half their income back to support their families. They’re more filial than I am,” Jing said. “Among government officials, Chinese social scientists, health professionals, they are coming around to see that prostitution is not fundamentally connected to a lack of values but a lack of jobs, choices, opportunities and education.”

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Cleaning up habits in time for the Olympics

Sunday, August 5th, 2007

The real countdown to next year’s Olympic Games in Beijing has begun, and Beijing Olympic officials are trying hard to educate the public about potentially offensive behavior. The question is, can people clean up their bad habits in time for the games? And more importantly, will the government’s plans have any long-lasting influence?

In the article Organizers strive for a ‘civilized’ sheen, CNN interviews a sociology professor from Hong Kong’s Chinese University who says:

Changes to public manners should not be enforced from the top-down. But rather it entails a fundamental change within the mindset of the people — a bottom up phenomenon.

If it is solely a form of political slogan, it will only make the population feel sick and tired.

A Beijing businesswoman interviewed for the article adds:

The government is putting in so much money and effort to elevate the inner quality of its citizens. We see those slogans about being civilized everywhere but there does not seem to be any substance behind the words.

It is impossible to change manners in a year. The whole populace must reach the critical point that the majority will adhere to good mannerisms.

Time will tell what impression Beijingers make on the world in 2008. Until now, the emphasis on good manners has been solely about “saving face,”by not looking uncouth in front of foreign tourists. Nothing has been said about the public bettering their manners for their own sake. The people of Beijing will still have to live with one another long after the games are over.

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