Two-child policy working, birthrate figures show
Updated: 2016-10-31 07:14
By SHAN JUAN(China Daily)
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Relaxation of limits meant to offset effects of aging population
When China relaxed its four-decade one-child policy at the start of 2016, there were a variety of predictions on whether the change in family planning rules would encourage enough people to have a second child.
Some said there would be too few to offset the effects of an aging population, citing reluctance by urbanites to increase the size of their families in the face of increased costs and new lifestyles.
Others predicted a baby boom because, after all, Chinese people love babies.
Now the numbers are in: In the first half of 2016, the proportion of Chinese newborns who were second children grew to 44.7 percent of total newborns.
That's an increase of some 6.9 percentage points over the proportion of second-child newborns for the whole of 2015, which was 37.9 percent. A total of 8.31 million newborns were registered nationwide this year by the end of June, according to the National Health and Family Planning Commission.
Some regions, mostly large cities, are beginning to see second children comprising more than half of local newborns, the commission said.
Available data indicate it's the highest proportion of second children since China introduced its family planning policies in the late 1970s, limiting most couples to just one child, the commission told China Daily.
In 2014, more exceptions to the one-child policy were introduced, such as the exception that allowed a second child when one parent was an only child. The number of second children began to grow.
The universal two-child policy was adopted by China's top leadership in October 2015, and it began to be implemented nationwide in 2016.
The new statistics make it clear that some families got started early in their planning for a second child, before the policy became official. The numbers are anticipated to go up for the year's second half.
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