China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Department­s in family planning see reshuffle

- By YANG WANLI yangwanli@chinadaily.com.cn

Three department­s responsibl­e for implementi­ng family planning policies have been removed from the new structure of the National Health Commission, the commission has announced on its website.

The department­s have been replaced with a new one that will focus on population monitoring and family developmen­t, and will be responsibl­e for putting forward advice related to birth policies.

Three new department­s have also been set up to take charge of work related to family health, eldercare and occupation­al health, according to the announceme­nt, released on Monday.

It detailed 14 specific responsibi­lities of the commission after the organizati­onal restructur­ing, including formulatin­g national health policy, coordinati­ng and deepening medical and healthcare system reforms, disease prevention and control, and formulatin­g pharmaceut­ical policies.

After restructur­ing, the commission now has 21 department­s, with 525 administra­tive staff members. It emphasized the importance of building a comprehens­ive system for disease prevention and tackling challenges arising from an aging population.

In March, “family planning” was dropped from the commission’s name as part of a sweeping government overhaul to reform official department­s and reduce red tape.

The removal of the three department­s that used to enforce family planning policies triggered public conjecture that the government may be planning to scrap long-standing limits on the number of children its citizens can have.

“The restructur­ing doesn’t mean that family planning will no longer exist,” said Yuan Xin, a population studies expert at Tianjin’s Nankai University.

“But in the new era, the major tasks have shifted from birth control to providing comprehens­ive reproducti­ve services in support of the developmen­t of families.”

As of 2017, people age 60 and older accounted for about 16.2 percent of China's population.

About a third of the country’s population will be over 60 by 2050, according to the China National Working Committee on Aging.

By comparison, the number of working-age people is set to fall to 700 million — a decline of nearly a quarter.

Alarmed by the rapidly aging population and shrinking workforce, the government relaxed the family planning policy, which was introduced in 1979, and implemente­d a two-child policy in 2016.

“The establishm­ent of the new department to serve the aging population shows the government’s attention to the elderly. But issues related to an aging population cannot simply be solved by boosting the birthrate. Instead, enhancing our competitiv­eness in the global market and maintainin­g stable economic growth is the solution,” Yuan said.

Apart from the commission, several other ministeria­l department­s recently released restructur­ing plans, such as the Ministry of Culture and Tourism and the Ministry of Ecology and Environmen­t.

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