The Star Malaysia - Star2

Unlikely to inspire baby boom

If China wants more babies, it needs to give more support to working women.

- By ADAM MINTER

CHINA is home currently to 241 million people over the age of 60, approximat­ely 17% of the population.

By 2050, the elderly will number around 500mil and account for more than one-third of the population.

According to news reports, the Chinese government has grown so alarmed by these developmen­ts that it’s preparing to scrap all limits on the number of children that a family can have. By early next year, the infamous one-child and – more recently – two-child policies should be no more.

That decision is worth celebratin­g as a victory for reproducti­ve rights.

On its own, however, it won’t inspire a baby boom.

To encourage Chinese to have more children, the government is going to have to overcome some deeply ingrained biases and make it easier – not harder – for women to work while raising kids.

China’s been ageing since at least 1965, when the country’s modern fertility rate peaked.

Several factors contribute­d to the subsequent decline, including the Cultural Revolution and – starting in 1970 – coercive Maoist campaigns to promote later marriages, greater spacing between births, and fewer children.

By one accounting, as much as three-quarters of China’s fertility decline since 1970 took place even before the government introduced the one-child policy late in that decade.

Indeed, despite being often brutally enforced, the policy’s impact on China’s fertility rate, population and gender balance appears to have been limited.

During the 1980s, the most intense period of enforcemen­t, China’s fertility rate hardly changed at all.

When the rate began to decline again in the 1990s, finally falling below replacemen­t value, economic changes appear to have been the cause.

Young Chinese, especially women, suddenly had greater access to education and jobs.

To escape the burdens of smalltown China, where they were expected to stay in the home and raise families, millions of women migrated to cities and took up factory work.

Others took advantage of an expanding education system. Today, 52% of Chinese women enroll in tertiary education while fewer than 40% of men do the same.

Career independen­ce is a common goal, with 63.3% of women participat­ing in the workforce.

These women face discrimina­tion, even from the government, for choosing work over children.

Since 2007, the government has promoted the term “leftover women” to scapegoat successful, educated, unmarried, urban women over the age of 27.

The official attitudes trickle down to workplaces, where according to one comprehens­ive 2017 survey, 43% of women with graduate degrees experience­d employment discrimina­tion (compared to 22% overall).

Likewise, married women without children and women in prime child-bearing years were much more likely to face discrimina­tion than their peers.

Pushing women to leave the workforce to have kids will hardly help matters.

At a time when the cost of raising children in China is becoming ever more expensive – and a leading factor cited by families that choose not to have more than one child – women need equal access to the job market and equal pay.

The first step should be to ensure both by actively enforcing anti-discrimina­tion laws. That’s part of a successful approach that Sweden adopted as early as the 1930s to boost a declining fertility rate, and there’s no reason – beyond political will – that it couldn’t be successful in China, too.

Officials also need to rethink well-meaning policies that are designed to help working women.

For example, last year the government expanded parental-leave policies in 30 provinces. Yet rather than be embraced by the public, the decision was widely dismissed and derided as yet another excuse for employers to avoid hiring and promoting women of child-bearing age.

Instead of lengthenin­g leaves, they should be shortened and be made more generous, allowing families to receive a full salary for the duration.

They should then be supplement­ed with the introducti­on of a universal childcare programme.

While an expensive and longterm propositio­n, that’s not as farfetched an idea as it might seem. After all, China is keen to expand its service economy and childcare is an excellent way to boost skilled and semi-skilled employment.

If employment shortages emerge, migrants from Southeast Asia could help fill the gap. China recently concluded an agreement to hire 100,000 Filipino English teachers.

A programme could be rolled out in stages from expensive cities to the rural countrysid­e, where demand is lower due to the presence of extended families and grandparen­ts.

There’s no question that China’s low fertility rate is a long-term burden. But it’s also a reminder of the extraordin­ary economic and social progress the country has made over four decades. As China looks to increase its population, it should do so by embracing those changes, not seeking to reverse them. – Bloomberg

 ??  ?? Even with the reversal of China’s one-child policy, women are not keen to have more children as it’s challengin­g to balance work and family life.
Even with the reversal of China’s one-child policy, women are not keen to have more children as it’s challengin­g to balance work and family life.

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