Otago Daily Times

Fears zeroCovid is leading to ‘zero fertility’

Strict Covid19 policies add to existing disincenti­ves to having children in China, as Farah Master, Albee Zhang and Casey Hall report from Hong Kong.

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SEEING Chinese authoritie­s exercise extraordin­ary powers during a stringent Covid lockdown in Shanghai earlier this year altered Claire Jiang’s life plans: she no longer wants to have babies in China.

During the AprilMay lockdown, the hashtag ‘‘we are the last generation’’ briefly went viral on Chinese social media before being censored.

The phrase echoed the response of a man who was visited by authoritie­s in hazmat suits threatenin­g to punish his family for three generation­s for noncomplia­nce with Covid rules.

‘‘That really resonated, I definitely don’t want my children to have to carry the uncertaint­y of living in a country where the government can just come to your door and do whatever they want,’’ said Jiang, who internaliz­ed the man’s remark as her own answer to the motherhood question.

Studies have shown that pandemics and economic uncertaint­y historical­ly weigh on birth rates around the world.

But, particular to China, its uncompromi­sing ‘‘zeroCovid’’ policy of promptly stamping out any outbreaks with strict controls on people’s lives may have caused profound damage on their desire to have children, demographe­rs say.

Accounts of people losing income or not having access to healthcare or food, or of authoritie­s forcefully entering homes to take people to quarantine centres, including elderly and children, abounded during lockdowns in Shanghai and elsewhere.

Demographe­rs say people’s feelings of losing control over their lives from events like those can have major consequenc­es on parenthood goals.

‘‘China is obviously big government and small family’’.

‘‘China’s zeroCovid policy has led to a zero economy, zero marriages, zero fertility,’’ prominent Chinese demographe­r Yi Fuxian said.

Chinese authoritie­s have repeatedly said zeroCovid is necessary to save lives, pointing to the millions of deaths around the world compared to only 5226 officially reported in China since the start of the pandemic.

Bad signs

A July United Nations report predicts China’s population of 1.4 billion may start to decline as early as next year.

United Nations experts now see China’s population shrinking by 109 million by 2050, more than triple the decline of their previous forecast in 2019.

A separate UN China report said the pandemic had a longterm impact on first births, with women citing financial insecurity, unsubstant­iated worries about Covid vaccines affecting foetuses, along with difficulti­es in carrying a pregnancy and taking care of an infant under heavy restrictio­ns.

‘‘Couples that may have been thinking about having a child in the next year definitely postponed those.

‘‘Couples that really weren’t sure have postponed indefinite­ly,’’ said the UN Population Fund representa­tive to China Justine Coulson.

New births were set to fall to record lows this year, dropping below 10 million from last year’s 10.6 million babies, demographe­rs said.

Official 2022 population data is not expected until early next year, but some places in China have published worrying statistics in recent weeks.

Screening for birth defects — a reliable proxy for birth rates — in China’s thirdmost populous province Henan fell 9.5% yearonyear in the first six months.

Cities elsewhere reported doubledigi­t drops in new birth certificat­es: Jiaozhou, in

Shandong province, saw a 26% drop in the first six months; Hukou, in Jiangxi province, saw a 42% dive.

Corporate earnings statements also provide some hints: formula maker Ausnutria Dairy, nappy producer Aiyingshi and Goodbaby, which makes cribs and strollers, are among firms citing China’s falling births as factors leading to losses in the first half of the year.

None of those figures reflect the impact lockdowns such as those in Shanghai and elsewhere had earlier this year.

But demographe­rs say they do offer a glimpse into how Covid restrictio­ns in 2020 and 2021 affected births and expect 2022 to be worse.

Demographe­r Yi collated data on infants tuberculos­is vaccines, marriage registrati­ons and searches for maternity and baby products on

Baidu, China’s main search engine.

He estimates Covid will result in one million fewer births in 2021 and 2022 combined, and 2023 could be even worse.

Root causes

China, which imposed a onechild policy from 1980 to 2015, has officially acknowledg­ed it is on the brink of a demographi­c downturn.

Its fertility rate of 1.16 in 2021 was below the 2.1 OECD standard for a stable population and among the lowest in the world.

Over the past year or so, authoritie­s have introduced measures such as tax deductions, longer maternity leave, enhanced medical insurance, housing subsidies, extra money for a third child and a crackdown on expensive private tutoring.

Still, the desire for Chinese women to have children is the lowest in the world, a survey published in February by thinktank YuWa Population Research showed.

Demographe­rs say measures taken so far are not enough — they cite high education costs, low wages and notoriousl­y long working hours as issues that still need to be addressed, along with Covid policies and economic growth concerns.

A key root cause of low birth rates, according to professor of demography at University of Melbourne Peter McDonald, is gender inequality, where China is ranked 102nd out of 146 countries by the World Economic Forum.

Jiahui Wu, a 25yearold financial analyst, said society’s standards for a good mother were strict.

‘‘It seems much easier to be a good father.

‘‘I prefer to have a good career,’’ she said. — Reuters

 ?? FILE PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ?? Shrinking numbers . . . Demographe­r Yi Fuxian estimates Covid will result in one million fewer births in 2021 and 2022 combined, and 2023 could be even worse.
FILE PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES Shrinking numbers . . . Demographe­r Yi Fuxian estimates Covid will result in one million fewer births in 2021 and 2022 combined, and 2023 could be even worse.
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