Garrison Keillor's Prairie Home Companion has made a  running joke out of the quite real difficulties Minnesota farmers have in  finding wives. Since the 1970s, at least, Minnesota farm girls have moved to  Minneapolis to be Mary Tyler Moore, leaving a lot of lonely farmers behind.
Similarly, in the Coen Bros.' "Big  Lebowski," Bunny Lebowski (Tara Reid), formerly Fawn Gunderson, the  straying hooker wife of an elderly Southern California millionaire, is being  searched for by a detective hired by her parents in Minnesota who want her to  come home. The snoop pulls out a black and white photograph to show The Dude:
                            
                           Private          Eye: "The Gundersons told me to show her this when I found her. The          family farm."
                            
                           A          bleak farmhouse and silo are the only features on a flat snow-swept          landscape.
                            
                           Private          eye: "Outside of Moorhead, Minnesota. They think it'll make her          homesick."
                            
                           In South Korea, the          problem is even worse, due to extremely low birth rates (a total          fertility rate of 1.1) and aborting girl babies. From Barbara Demick in          the Los          Angeles Times:
                            
                   Jeong Ha-gi,  46, flew to Vietnam on a tour organized for South Korean bachelors. He was  looking for a wife who would be tough enough to withstand the rigors of life on  a rice farm. Trying to distinguish among all the women with the numbers pinned  to their shirts, he decided the one with a bad complexion might be made of  sturdy stuff. They were married three days later.
Today, they live together in sullen silence, a chasm of cultural differences  between them. She speaks no Korean, he no Vietnamese. They communicate —  barely — with a well-thumbed phrase book. Nguyen Thu Dong, who turned out to  be only 20, doesn't like getting up at 5 a.m. to do the farm chores. She turns  up her nose at kimchi.
"We have a lot of issues between us," said the burly Jeong, who in his  undershirt resembles a Korean version of the young Marlon Brando. "Our age  difference, our culture, our food. But I wanted a wife and she is who I  got."
         
         John Derbyshire         writes to me:
          
         I         couldn't help but think of the archetypal New England farmer whose wife         died after 50 yrs of marriage. A neighbor went over to offer         condolences.
       
        "Guess you'll be missing her after all them years, Zeke."
       
        "Can't really say so. Never did get to like her much."
          
         The LA Times article         goes on:
          
 Despite the obvious pitfalls, South Korean men increasingly are going abroad to  find wives. They have little choice in the matter unless they want to remain  bachelors for life.
The marriage market in Asia is becoming rapidly globalized, and just in time for  tens of thousands of single-but-looking South Korean men, most of them in the  countryside where marriageable women are in scant supply. With little hope of  finding wives of their own nationality and producing children to take over the  farm, the men are pooling their family's resources to raise up to $20,000 to  find a spouse abroad.
The phenomenon has become so widespread that last year 13% of South Korean  marriages were to foreigners. More than a third of the rural men who married  last year have foreign wives, most of them Vietnamese, Chinese and Philippine.  That's a huge change in a country once among the most homogenous in the world.
                            
                   Mark Steyn goes on and on  about how the low birthrate of Europe is caused by socialism, long vacations,  and general decadent Eurowimpery, but how does that explain the even lower  birthrate of South Korean farmers?
By the way, there's a widespread assumption that the high sex ratio of males to  females in Asia will lead to massive violence by frustrated males. Yet, if we  look at the most violent regions of America, the black inner cities, we see a  very low ratio of males to females, due to so many males being in prison or  dead. In the ghettoes, men don't have to behave like good prospective husbands  to get women because there is so little competition. So, perhaps the assumption  about East Asia is dubious?
                           
The globalized         wife market: A reader who lives in Japan writes:
                            
                           I'm         just back from the Philippines where there is no shortage of children.         It's catholic and mostly poor, so people have not picked up modern         values. After being the source of cheap workers for the world for         decades, it now the source of cheap wives. They are exported to Japan         and other Asian countries as wives for farmers. Lots of Filipinas also         come to Japan to make good money working as hostesses in bars. They have         a good reputation. They are fairly cute and don't make trouble. A fair         number end up snagging a Japanese husband. But, the Philippines is         crawling with middle aged or older men married to young Filipinas.         Unattractive, divorced white men with nominal pensions can live there         quite comfortably. There are also oodles of older Japanese men, who may         or may not be divorced, pumping cash into the economy thru young female         companions.
     
       For some reason the Philippines is now also very popular with young         Koreans. Well, it is close, cheap, and they can tell their parents they         are studying English, although it looks like they are majoring in         computer games. There are lots of stores and restaurants with hangul         characters on the outside. The Koreans are young and don't seem to be         "dating" Filipinas very much yet. There is the inevitable         language barrier and there seem to be a lot of young Korean women         hanging around too. Probably these are city kids, not farmers.
                           ***
                            
                            
                           Low Asian         birthrates: A reader who lived in three East Asian countries for a         decade writes from China:
                            
                           As         with the rest of the world, young people are deserting the farms to go         live in the cities. The young men who remain on the family farm cannot         find wife in their home country (Japan, Korea, Taiwan). So, they go for         mail order brides from China, Vietnam, and Thailand. However, China is         no good anymore because China also has bride shortage as well. This         leaves Vietnam, Thailand, and the Philippines. Indonesia is out because         it is Muslim.
     
       However, the birth rate is rapidly declining even in Thailand and         Vietnam as well as the rest of South East Asia.
     
       The 800 lbs explanation that Mark Steyn overlooks for the decline of         Asian birthrates is because it is now expensive to raise kids in Asia         (except in the poor parts of S.E. Asia). This is partly due to         urbanization, but also to the great expectations required to properly         raise kids in Asia, mainly high education. Schools (primary, secondary,         and university) are even more expensive, relative to mean income, than         they are in the U.S. Housing is also more expensive (relative to income)         than in the U.S.
     
       (Medical care is cheaper. That's because it is less regulated and         bureaucratized than in the U.S.)
     
       Housing in Asia does not mean single family detached housing in leafy         suburbs, as it does in the U.S. Rather, it refers to the luxury 3         bedroom condominium in the fashionable high-rise. Compared to U.S.         suburbs, urban high-rise living is not conducive to having kids.
     
       The reason why even the poor people in Asia are no longer having kids is         because, in Asia, it is great shame to have kids and not provide decent         upbringing to them. To have kids without being financially prepared for         them marks one as being "low class" and is a source of shame.
     
       Lastly, fewer people are having kids because, in the high-rise urban environment,         there is lots of fun to be had by traveling and partying a lot.
         ***Permalink***
                                      
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer