The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

China may consider ending birth limits as soon as this year

- By Dandan Li

China is planBEIJIN­G — ning to scrap all limits on the number of children a family can have, according to people familiar with the matter, in what would be a historic end that to a policy spurred countless humanright­s abuses and left the world’s second-largest economy short of workers. The State Council, China’s cabinet, has commission­ed research on the repercussi­ons of ending the country’s roughly four-decade-old policy and intends to enact the change nationwide, said the people, who asked not to be named while discussing government deliberati­ons. The leadership wants to reduce the pace of aging in China’s population and remove a source of internatio­nal criticism, one of the people said. Proposals under discussion would replace the population-control policy with one called “independen­t fertility,” allowing people to decide how many children to have, the person said. The decision could be made as soon as the fourth quarter, the second person said, adding that the announce- ment might also be pushed into 2019. Danone, which has doubled its share of China’s baby food market in the past five years, rose to a session high in Paris before paring gains. Reckitt Benckiser shares erased declines in London. The policy change would close the book on one the of largest social experiment­s in human history, which left the world’s most-populous country with a rapidly aging population and 30 million more men than women. The policies have forced generation­s of Chinese parents to pay fines, submit to abortions or raise children in the shadows. The U.S. and other Western nations have criticized the coercive measures required to enforce the birth limits, including steep fines, sterilizat­ion and forced abortions. The 2015 shift toward a two-child policy was part of a gradual effort to loosen the birth limits over the years as China’s working-age population began to wane. An initial feasibilit­y study was submitted to Chinese Premier Li Keqiang in April, according to one of the people familiar with the discussion­s. That study found there would be “limited” benefits to lifting birth restrictio­ns nationwide. Li requested more research on the social impact of scrapping the policy altogether, the person said. Neither the State Council Informatio­n Office nor the National Health Commission immediatel­y returned faxed requests for comment Monday. The move underscore­s growing concern among Chinese policy makers that more dramatic action is needed three years after allowing all families to have two children instead of one. Births fell 3.5 percent to 17.2 million nationwide last year, according to the Bureau of National Statistics, erasing almost half of the increase in births caused by relaxing the policy. China’s graying society will have broad consequenc­es for the nation and the world, weighing on President Xi Jinping’s effort to develop the economy, driving up pension and healthcare costs, and sending foreign companies further afield for labor. The State Council last year projected that about a quarter of China’s population will be 60 or older by 2030, up from 13 percent in 2010.

 ?? BRYAN DENTON /THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Second-graders attend class in southern Beijing in December 2017. China is considerin­g removing its controvers­ial state-sanctioned limits on the number of children that a family can have. The country’s rapidly aging population will have broad...
BRYAN DENTON /THE NEW YORK TIMES Second-graders attend class in southern Beijing in December 2017. China is considerin­g removing its controvers­ial state-sanctioned limits on the number of children that a family can have. The country’s rapidly aging population will have broad...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States