Fortune Telling Collection - Comprehensive fortune-telling - The married girl didn't transfer her account. Why did she hang up her account? Can girls get married without changing their hukou?

The married girl didn't transfer her account. Why did she hang up her account? Can girls get married without changing their hukou?

First of all, it should be noted that a married girl does not belong to an "empty hukou" if she does not transfer her hukou. The reason is that the hukou is both the girl's ancestral home and her ancestral home, so the girl's hukou belongs to her ancestral home and still enjoys the equal treatment of local residents.

In addition, whether a girl gets married or not depends entirely on her own wishes, and there is no legal provision. If you don't want to transfer your account, you don't have to.

In some rural areas, there has always been such a traditional concept, that is, "the water spilled by the married daughter." If a girl gets married, it has little to do with the village where she used to live.

Not long ago, a judgment of the Intermediate People's Court of Linyi City, Shandong Province caused widespread concern. The thing is this: "Ms. Ma has always lived in the village. After marriage, she did not move out of her ancestral home, nor did she move her household registration to her husband's family, and did not enjoy the collective treatment of her husband's family. The account of Ms. Ma's child falls on Ms. Ma's father's account book. After 2005, the collective welfare of Ms. Ma's village rose to two or three thousand yuan a year. On 20 10, the village collective stopped granting Ms. Ma's welfare on the grounds that the "married daughter" was empty, and all her children did not enjoy welfare treatment. In 2022, Ms. Ma took it to court. "

In the end, the court ruled that "although Ms. Ma moved out of the village after marriage, she still has the membership of the village collective economy and should enjoy the corresponding welfare benefits according to regulations."

After the verdict was pronounced, there were also two levels of differentiation in comments. Some people think that this is right, which is conducive to safeguarding the interests of women's groups. Village collectives cannot stop issuing relevant welfare benefits just because women in their villages get married. However, some people think that this will increase the burden of village collective welfare treatment, which is not conducive to the development of the village, and may also lead to the abuse of some rights.

In my opinion, both of these statements have some truth. However, I support the court's decision. I think it is fair and reasonable to safeguard the village collective welfare treatment first, and women's rights and interests cannot be discriminated against and deprived on the grounds of marriage. If you are really worried that the burden of collective welfare benefits will increase, then communicate with each other in advance and negotiate to deal with the existing problems.

In addition, I would like to add, what is an empty account? Empty account is a term that arose in 1990s because of buying and selling accounts. To put it bluntly, residents only have local accounts, while people don't actually live there. Ms. Ma, the protagonist of the above story, obviously does not belong to the empty account.

Finally, I also hope to improve the relevant laws to fundamentally prevent such incidents from happening again!