World

China allows couples third child to tackle falling birth rate

August 22, 2021
China will allow couples to legally have a third child as it seeks to prevent its demographic crisis from worsening. — Courtesy file photo
China will allow couples to legally have a third child as it seeks to prevent its demographic crisis from worsening. — Courtesy file photo



BEIJING — China will allow couples to legally have a third child as it seeks to prevent its demographic crisis from worsening.

At its session on Friday, the ceremonial legislature amended the Population and Family Planning Law, cancelling the imposition of fines for breaking the earlier child restrictions.

The Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress called for additional parental leave and childcare resources, with an amendment proposed over new measures in schooling, housing, employment and finance “to ease the burden on families”.

From the 1980s, China strictly limited most couples to one child.

The rules were eased for the first time in 2015 to allow two children as officials acknowledged the looming consequences of the plummeting birthrate. The overwhelming fear is that China will grow old before it becomes wealthy.

China long touted its one-child policy as a success in preventing 400 million additional births in the world’s most populous country, thus saving resources and helping drive economic growth.

However, China’s birth rate, paralleling trends in South Korea, Thailand and other Asian economies, already was falling before the one-child rule. The average number of children per mother tumbled from above six in the 1960s to below three by 1980, according to the World Bank.

Meanwhile, the number of working-age people in China has fallen over the past decade and the population has barely grown, adding to strains in an ageing society. A once-a-decade government census found the population rose to 1.411 billion people last year, up 72 million from 2010.

Statistics show 12 million babies were born last year, which would be down 18% from 2019’s 14.6 million.

Chinese over 60, who number 264 million, accounted for 18.7% of the country’s total population in 2020, 5.44 percentage points higher than in 2010. At the same time, the working-age population fell to 63.3% of the total from 70.1% a decade ago.

The shift to the two-child rule led to a temporary bump in the numbers of births but its effects soon wore off and total births continued to fall because many women continued to decide against starting families.

At its session Friday, the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress canceled the levelling of fines for breaking the earlier restrictions and called for additional parental leave and childcare resources. New measures in finance, taxation, schooling, housing and employment should be introduced to “to ease the burden on families," the amendment said. — Euronews


August 22, 2021
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