By+staff+reporter+DANG+XIAOFEI
AT the First Plenary Session of the Chinese Peoples Political Consultative Conference on September 21, 1949, Mao Zedong pointed out that China had a population of 475 million. As of June 30, 1953, the countrys total population had surpassed 600 million. Statistics indicate that in 1970 the average number of births per Chinese couple was five and the total population had reached 830 million.
Drop in Birth Rate
To curb population growth, since 1953, China had introduced contraception and birth control. In 1982, the family planning policy was incorporated into the countrys Constitution as a basic state policy, requiring over 90 percent of Han couples to have one child only. In special circumstances and only after official approval, some couples were allowed to have a second child. For ethnic minority groups, although family planning had also been advocated, the policy implementation was more lenient. Later, based on overall practicalities, China made adjustments to its birth policy. For example, since 1984 across the countrys rural areas, couples whose only child is a girl have been allowed to have a second child; couples belonging to minori- ties whose total population is below 10 million have been allowed to have two children, and in special circumstances couples may have three. The family planning policy has successfully helped China avoid an unwieldy increase in its population.
“Over 40-odd years, Chinas family planning policy has prevented 400 million people from being added to its population,” said Mao Qunan, spokesman for the National Health and Family Planning Commission (NHFPC). In 2012, Chinas natural population growth rate dropped to 4.95 births per 1,000, half the average world level, from 25.8 per 1,000 in 1970.
Statistics show that by the end of 2012, Chinas total population stood at 1.354 billion, with 16.35 million births yearly, maintaining a low birth rate. In contrast, the number of births in 1970 was 27.39 million.
“If it hadnt been for the family planning policy, Chinas per capita arable land, food, forest, fresh water and energy would be at least 20 percent lower than the present level,” Mao said. In fact, even thus, Chinas per capita forestland, grassland and fresh water resources are only one ninth, one third and one quarter of the world levels, respectively.
Negative Effects
Inevitably, China has also witnessed negative effects of the family planning policy. First of all, the demographic dividend that has fueled Chinas economic growth is gradually disappearing. As of the end of 2012, Chinas working-age population (15-59 years old) fell by 3.45 million compared with 2011, marking the first drop in Chinas net workingage population for a considerable period of time. It is estimated that from 2023 Chinas working-age population will decrease by an annual average of 8 million, according to Li Bin, minister of the NHFPC. China is aging fast. The aging population is expected to peak at 400 million by the early 2030s, with its proportion to the total population rising to one quarter from one seventh today.endprint
“A reduction in Chinas labor force signals the gradual decline of Chinas demographic dividend,” said Zhang Yi, deputy director of the Institute of Sociology under the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CASS). In his view, the adjustment of Chinas family planning policy to allow couples to have two children if either parent is an only child is a major move towards improving Chinas demographic structure. However, Cai Fang, director of the CASS Institute of Population and Labor Economics, said that only once the generation born after the relaxation of the birth policy enters the labor market would the positive impact of the adjustment in improving demographic structure be palpable.
Another side-effect of the birth control policy is reflected in the stark reality of elderly parents losing their only child. The first generation of Chinese parents subject to the one-child policy is aging. Statistics show a yearly increase of 76,000 households whose only child dies. As of 2010, the number of couples nationwide over the age of 50 who had lost their only child surpassed one million. The plight of parents bereaved of their only child is one of the reasons for many peoples reservations about the one-child policy.
Moreover, other drawbacks resulting from being an only child such as a lack of cooperative awareness and loneliness impinge on young parents. All these factors led to calls for the easing of the onechild policy.
More Births?
Today, as the birth policy relaxes, the question is: how many couples out of the national total of 20 million with either party as an only child are willing to have two children? Li Lei, aged 32, works for an IT company in Beijing as a project manager. He has a daughter aged one and a half. “Well certainly have a second child,” Li said. “As the only child, my daughter is lonely. I hope she will have a sibling in the future as company. It will be good for her character development and mental health,” he added.
A survey headed by Zhai Zhenwu, dean of the School of Sociology and Population Studies at Renmin University of China, found that about 50 to 60 percent of the couples eligible to have two children under the new policy are willing to have a second child.
Cheng Gang, aged 32, belongs to the group not planning to have a second child. Although both he and his wife are only children, he affirmed that he would not have another child. He said, “One more child would be a strain on our energy and money, and will, naturally, lower the quality of our life and affect our work at the same time.”
Yin Zhigang, deputy director of the Beijing Administrative Colleges Beijing Population and Development Research Center, held that the relaxation of Chinas one-child policy would lead to a short-term rebound of the birth rate, but in the long run, it would not see a big upswing. “Restricted by practical considerations like the increase in childrearing costs, many young couples will not blindly choose to have two children,”he said. He also pointed out that due to rising living and education costs, a mindset of having less children has formed among couples of childbearing age.endprint