<p>Chinese teen Robin spends hours online chatting to her man, who always has a sympathetic ear for her problems -- as long as she's willing to pay him.</p>.<p>The 19-year-old pre-medical student has spent more than 1,000 yuan ($150) speaking to "virtual boyfriends".</p>.<p>These aren't seedy sex-chat lines but men who charge for friendly and flirty online communication, from wake-up calls to lengthy text exchanges and video conversations.</p>.<p>"If someone is willing to keep me company and chat, I'm pretty willing to spend money," said Robin, who didn't want to give her real name.</p>.<p>The option for intimacy on-demand has gained popularity among China's middle-income young women, who are often focused on careers with no immediate plans to marry and start a family.</p>.<p>Shops selling virtual friends and partners can be found on Chinese messaging app WeChat or on an e-commerce site like Taobao.</p>.<p>Several virtual boyfriends told AFP that most of their customers are single women in their twenties with disposable income.</p>.<p>By day, 22-year-old Zhuansun Xu is a foreign exchange trader in Beijing. By night, he chats with female clients who pay him to be their "boyfriend", something he has done for the past year.</p>.<p>Girls come to Zhuansun with different needs -- some want friendly advice, while others have more romantic requests.</p>.<p>"While we're interacting, I tell myself: I really am her boyfriend, so how can I treat her well?" he told AFP.</p>.<p>"But after we're done, I'll stop thinking this way."</p>.<p>Prices start from a few yuan for half an hour of texting, to a few thousand yuan to keep a companion on retainer for phone calls throughout a month.</p>.<p>"People have figured out how to commodify affection," said Chris K.K. Tan, an associate professor at Nanjing University who has researched the phenomenon.</p>.<p>"This is a new mode of womanhood that is unprecedented in China," Tan said.</p>.<p>Pursuing romance had not been available to many Chinese women in the past.</p>.<p>Sandy To, a sociologist at the University of Hong Kong, said marriage had traditionally been a "must" in patriarchal Chinese society.</p>.<p>But Tan says that the one-child policy -- which came into force in 1979 and limited the size of most families -- has created "a generation of self-confident and resourceful women."</p>.<p>A preference for boys meant a generation of sex-selective abortions and abandoned baby girls, and in 2018, China still had the world's most skewed gender ratio at 114 boys born for every 100 girls.</p>.<p>For many women, the policy changed their family dynamics.</p>.<p>Parents of the female children "raised them as sons", says Roseann Lake, author of a book on China's unmarried women.</p>.<p>"All of those things that traditionally you needed to find in a man -- a house, financial security -- they were raised with it," she says.</p>.<p>Lisa, a 28-year-old executive in Shanghai, has hired virtual boyfriends to act out romantic scenarios through text messaging.</p>.<p>"Of course, there were feelings of love, in letting myself feel like I was being loved," she said, preferring not to use her real name.</p>.<p>"Because I was just buying a service, I don't feel any guilt towards real people."</p>.<p> In the World Economic Forum's 2018 global gender gap report, China ranks 103 out of 149 countries on the overall disparity between men and women.</p>.<p>However, that climbs to 86 when ranked solely for economic participation and opportunity.</p>.<p>As their economic situation improves, fewer women are choosing to get married.</p>.<p>China's marriage rate -- the number of marriages per year -- has been in decline over the last five years. Last year it reached 7.2 per 1,000 people, according to the National Bureau of Statistics.</p>.<p>Once their basic needs are guaranteed, more women are looking to satisfy their need for "emotional and self-fulfilment," says Lake.</p>.<p>Although they are materially better off, the lives of many young urban women are "isolating", says Tan.</p>.<p>Most have spent their teenage years studying for the country's rigorous university entrance exams, at the cost of developing relationships outside of school.</p>.<p>Buying virtual boyfriends "is their chance to experiment with love and relationships," he says.</p>.<p>For Robin and Lisa, virtual companions are appealing because the relationship was convenient.</p>.<p>"If I have serious psychological stress, this could make some people think I'm being fussy," said Robin.</p>.<p>"But because I'm giving (the virtual companions) money, they have to reassure me."</p>
<p>Chinese teen Robin spends hours online chatting to her man, who always has a sympathetic ear for her problems -- as long as she's willing to pay him.</p>.<p>The 19-year-old pre-medical student has spent more than 1,000 yuan ($150) speaking to "virtual boyfriends".</p>.<p>These aren't seedy sex-chat lines but men who charge for friendly and flirty online communication, from wake-up calls to lengthy text exchanges and video conversations.</p>.<p>"If someone is willing to keep me company and chat, I'm pretty willing to spend money," said Robin, who didn't want to give her real name.</p>.<p>The option for intimacy on-demand has gained popularity among China's middle-income young women, who are often focused on careers with no immediate plans to marry and start a family.</p>.<p>Shops selling virtual friends and partners can be found on Chinese messaging app WeChat or on an e-commerce site like Taobao.</p>.<p>Several virtual boyfriends told AFP that most of their customers are single women in their twenties with disposable income.</p>.<p>By day, 22-year-old Zhuansun Xu is a foreign exchange trader in Beijing. By night, he chats with female clients who pay him to be their "boyfriend", something he has done for the past year.</p>.<p>Girls come to Zhuansun with different needs -- some want friendly advice, while others have more romantic requests.</p>.<p>"While we're interacting, I tell myself: I really am her boyfriend, so how can I treat her well?" he told AFP.</p>.<p>"But after we're done, I'll stop thinking this way."</p>.<p>Prices start from a few yuan for half an hour of texting, to a few thousand yuan to keep a companion on retainer for phone calls throughout a month.</p>.<p>"People have figured out how to commodify affection," said Chris K.K. Tan, an associate professor at Nanjing University who has researched the phenomenon.</p>.<p>"This is a new mode of womanhood that is unprecedented in China," Tan said.</p>.<p>Pursuing romance had not been available to many Chinese women in the past.</p>.<p>Sandy To, a sociologist at the University of Hong Kong, said marriage had traditionally been a "must" in patriarchal Chinese society.</p>.<p>But Tan says that the one-child policy -- which came into force in 1979 and limited the size of most families -- has created "a generation of self-confident and resourceful women."</p>.<p>A preference for boys meant a generation of sex-selective abortions and abandoned baby girls, and in 2018, China still had the world's most skewed gender ratio at 114 boys born for every 100 girls.</p>.<p>For many women, the policy changed their family dynamics.</p>.<p>Parents of the female children "raised them as sons", says Roseann Lake, author of a book on China's unmarried women.</p>.<p>"All of those things that traditionally you needed to find in a man -- a house, financial security -- they were raised with it," she says.</p>.<p>Lisa, a 28-year-old executive in Shanghai, has hired virtual boyfriends to act out romantic scenarios through text messaging.</p>.<p>"Of course, there were feelings of love, in letting myself feel like I was being loved," she said, preferring not to use her real name.</p>.<p>"Because I was just buying a service, I don't feel any guilt towards real people."</p>.<p> In the World Economic Forum's 2018 global gender gap report, China ranks 103 out of 149 countries on the overall disparity between men and women.</p>.<p>However, that climbs to 86 when ranked solely for economic participation and opportunity.</p>.<p>As their economic situation improves, fewer women are choosing to get married.</p>.<p>China's marriage rate -- the number of marriages per year -- has been in decline over the last five years. Last year it reached 7.2 per 1,000 people, according to the National Bureau of Statistics.</p>.<p>Once their basic needs are guaranteed, more women are looking to satisfy their need for "emotional and self-fulfilment," says Lake.</p>.<p>Although they are materially better off, the lives of many young urban women are "isolating", says Tan.</p>.<p>Most have spent their teenage years studying for the country's rigorous university entrance exams, at the cost of developing relationships outside of school.</p>.<p>Buying virtual boyfriends "is their chance to experiment with love and relationships," he says.</p>.<p>For Robin and Lisa, virtual companions are appealing because the relationship was convenient.</p>.<p>"If I have serious psychological stress, this could make some people think I'm being fussy," said Robin.</p>.<p>"But because I'm giving (the virtual companions) money, they have to reassure me."</p>