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China to allow couples to have third child

Topics Covered: Effect of policies and politics of developed and developing countries on India’s interests, Indian diaspora.

China to allow couples to have third child:


Context:

Days after China’s census data showed population growth slipping to its slowest rate since the 1950s, the country has announced it will now allow three children per married couple.

  • Please note, five years ago in 2016, it first relaxed its controversial one-child policy to two.

Firstly, why was one-child policy implemented?

China embarked upon its one-child policy in 1980, when the Communist Party was concerned that the country’s growing population, which at the time was approaching one billion, would impede economic progress.

  • It was enforced through several means, including incentivising families financially to have one child, making contraceptives widely available, and imposing sanctions against those who violated the policy.

Criticisms associated with this policy:

Chinese authorities have long hailed the policy as a success, claiming that it helped the country avert severe food and water shortages by preventing up to 40 crore people from being born.

However, the one-child limit was also a source of discontent, as:

  1. The state used brutal tactics such as forced abortions and sterilisations.
  2. It violated human rights, and was unfair to poorer Chinese since the richer ones could afford to pay economic sanctions if they violated the policy.
  3. It gave way for enforcing reproductive limits as a tool for social control.
  4. It affected the sex ratio- skewed towards males.
  5. It led to abortion of female fetuses rose and so did the number of girls who were placed in orphanages or abandoned.
  6. It made China’s population age faster than other countries, impacting the country’s growth potential.

Why was it discontinued?

Fears of a rapidly ageing population undermining economic growth forced the ruling Communist Party to allow two children per married couple.

What necessiated further reforms?

While the relaxation did result in some improvement in the proportion of young people in the country, the policy change was deemed insufficient in averting an impending demographic crisis.

Challenges ahead:

Experts say relaxing limits on reproductive rights alone cannot go a long way in averting an unwanted demographic shift.

The main factors behind fewer children being born are:

  1. Rising costs of living, education and supporting ageing parents.
  2. Country’s pervasive culture of long working hours.
  3. Many couples believing that one child is enough, and some expressing no interest in having children.

 

Know about China’s latest census report, : Read here 

 

Insta Curious:

Why India Does Not Need A Two-Child Law? Read here, 

Did you know that few Indian states too have such policies. Read here

Sources: the Hindu.