Manila Bulletin

China considerin­g one-child policy changes

-

BEIJING, China ( AFP) — China is considerin­g further changes to its family planning laws, Premier Li Keqiang said Sunday, after a relaxation in the “one child policy’’ failed to see significan­tly more babies being born.

The ruling Communist Party imposed strict rules in the late 1970s to limit population growth, with most urban couples restricted to a single offspring.

The often brutally enforced policy has been hugely controvers­ial, but officials say it has been a key factor in China’s rising prosperity. Now, though, it is leading to demographi­c problems including a rapidly ageing population and a shrinking labour force.

A relaxation in the regulation­s in late 2013, allowing couples to have two offspring if at least one parent was an only child, failed to see a marked increase in births.

Li told reporters that Beijing would assess the reform along with “China’s economic and social developmen­t situation’’ before any possible change in regulation­s.

“Both the pros and cons will be weighed,’’ he said, adding that “im- provements, adjustment­s’’ would only be made in accordance with legal procedures.

Li’s comments were measured but were in marked contrast to past official declaratio­ns that family planning is a “fundamenta­l national strategy’’ that cannot be “shaken’’.

The topic was raised at his once-ayear meeting with journalist­s at Beijing’s Great Hall of the People -- where questions are generally submitted in advance -- by state broadcaste­r CCTV and seized on by the official news agency Xinhua.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines