(Redirected from Little emperor)
'Little Emperor Syndrome' is a name for condition affecting both parents and their one child for example in urban areas of
China,
Beijing and
Shanghai. It is considered to be an indirect result of the
one child policy. With both parents lavishing attention and resources on their one child, the child becomes increasingly spoiled and gains a sense of self importance and entitlement. Parents in
China and in surrounding nations such as
Singapore,
Malaysia and
South Korea where a 'one child only' incentives are also being encouraged, have been known to wait outside the school for their children all day, carry their school bags around after them and cater for their every need right into teenage and early adult life.
Parents turn to heavy
investment on their
only child partly in order to relive their own dreams and aspirations. They see themselves in the
development of their child and completely focus their lives on them. With parents constantly predicting and telling of high hopes for the future, the child is established as the main focus of the
family.
Experts suggest that too much care and pampering may result in the child ending up incapable of leading a confident future life. Many youngsters do not get exposed to life's realities and in many cases the parent's only goal is to get their child into a good slot at a respected
university. The truth is that only a little more than 10% of high school students in
China can hope to get into a
college.
There are known connections between the syndrome and
type 2 diabetes, often a result of
obesity. As the
population pyramid in
China is top heavy, all four grandparents are usually still alive and have been known to over nourish their grandchildren, creating a
generation of
overweight spoiled boys and girls.
China's one-child policy
As single children under China’s
One-Child Policy, Little Emperors have access to greater purchasing powers, and more than previous generations, can buy consumer goods. Many individuals in the generation inherit in a 4-2-1 structure (4 grandparents, two parents and one child), leaving accumulated wealth to one heir. The reasons for parental indulgence of their child stem from the reality that single children in China are the sole perpetuators of the family legacy and face pressure to achieve. Second, China firmly values
Confucian filial piety, in which children are expected to attend to their parents as they age. As a result, parents exert pressure on their child to succeed in education so that he or she may take care of them in old age. Increased competition among state-run corporations has impacted the need for parents to rely on their children. The global implications of an entire generation of single children are yet unknown since China’s
Generation Y is the first to be affected.
External Links
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Problems Encounterd by Little Emperors