Comparison

China vs Finland

Side-by-side comparison of how these places approach childhood.

At a glance

China

In China, grandparents raise an estimated 90 million 'left-behind children' while parents work in distant cities.

Mass internal migration has created a generation where rural grandparents are the primary caregivers โ€” reshaping family structure at an unprecedented scale.

Finland

In Finland, children don't start formal school until age 7 โ€” and the country consistently tops global education rankings.

The Finnish model prioritizes play-based learning in early years, trusting that children who start later catch up โ€” and often surpass โ€” their peers.

How they compare
School systems
East Asian model

China

A nationally unified curriculum with intense academic pressure. The gaokao university entrance exam defines life outcomes. Recent 'double reduction' policy (2021) banned most for-profit tutoring for school-age children, dramatically reshaping the education landscape.

Nordic model

Finland

Finland's education system is built on trust โ€” in teachers, in children, and in the process. There are no private schools of significance, no standardized tests until age 16, no school inspections, and no school rankings. All teachers hold a master's degree. Class sizes average 20 students.

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โ† China profile ยท Finland profile โ†’