Families can now have up to 3-kids in China

The sudden move by the CCP has taken experts by surprise, attributing it to the government realising “that the population situation is relatively severe”. Picture: Greg Baker/AFP
China has announced it will allow all couples to have three children, ending a strict two-child policy that failed to boost China’s declining birthrates. 

The change was approved by President Xi Jinping in a Politburo meeting, according to state media outlet Xinhua, after a once-in-a-decade census showed that China’s population grew at its slowest pace in decades under the rule, putting pressure on Beijing to boost measures for couples to have more babies and avert a population decline.

According to the census, around 12 million babies were born last year in China – the lowest number of births recorded since the 1960s, and a significant decrease from the 18 million reported in 2016.

The New York Times’China correspondent, Sui-Lee Wee, wrote that the move is also reflective of “concerns that the rapidly rising number of older people in China could exacerbate a shortage of workers and strain the economy in the near future”.

Following its meeting, the Politburo – China’s top decision-making body – said the move will come with “supportive measures, which will be conducive to improving our country’s population structure, fulfilling the country’s strategy of actively coping with an ageing population and maintaining the advantage, endowment of human resources”.

The “one-child” policy was first imposed in the 1980s as a way of slowing population growth and bolstering an economic boom that was then just beginning.

But by 2013, Chinese officials had begun to understand the implications of the nation’s ageing population and updated the policy to allow parents from one-child families to have as many as two children themselves.

From January 1, 2016, the limit was raised to two children for everyone.

While the second-child policy had a positive impact on the birthrate, it proved short-term in nature, principal economist from The Economist Intelligence Unit, Ms Yue Su, told the BBC.

Speaking to The Times, several experts said that while births in China have fallen for four consecutive years, this latest announcement still took them by surprise.

This was a bit sudden and earlier than I expected, independent demographer, He Yafu, told the publication.
The decision makers have probably realised that the population situation is relatively severe.

The announcement drew a chilly response on Chinese social media, though, with many people posting in response to the news that they couldn’t afford to even have one child.

I am willing to have three children if you give me 5 million yuan ($1.02 million), one person wrote on popular platform Weibo.
Don’t they know that most young people are already tired enough just trying to feed themselves? wrote another, pointing to a common sentiment about the rising costs of living.

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