Greece vs China
Side-by-side comparison of how these places approach childhood.
Greece
In Greece, children eat dinner at tavernas at 10 PM โ and nobody thinks they should be in bed.
Greek family life follows a Mediterranean rhythm where children are fully integrated into adult social spaces, and late nights are a feature, not a flaw, of childhood.
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.
Greece
School starts at age 6. Compulsory education covers 6 years of primary (dimotiko) and 3 years of lower secondary (gymnasio). Upper secondary (lykeio) is 3 years. The system is highly centralized, with curricula and textbooks set nationally.
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.
Planning a move from Greece to China?
Get a personalised Family Integration Playbook โ your parenting style mapped to your destination's culture.
Get your playbook โ $99