China may scrap one-child policy

Written By DNA Web Team | Updated:

China could scrap its one-child policy, a senior family planning official said today, acknowledging concerns about its effects in creating an ageing society and gender gap.

BEIJING: China could scrap its one-child policy, a senior family planning official said today, acknowledging concerns about its effects in creating an ageing society and gender gap. The controversial rules, which restrict most urban families to a single child and rural households to two, were introduced in the 1970s in a bid to bring the country’s vast population – the world’s largest – from soaring out of control and outstripping resources.

But the vice-minister of the National Population and Family Planning Commission said officials were carrying out detailed examination of the environmental, social and other implications of changing the law.

Asked if they were planning to axe the one-child policy, Zhao Baige told reporters in Beijing that there was a “very serious process” of study.

“I cannot answer at what time or how we will decide, but this has really become a big issue among decision makers,” she said. “We want to have a transition from control to a slowdown [relaxation], incrementally. The attitude is to do the studies, to consider it responsibly.”

Although the population has yet to peak —it is expected to rise from 1.3 billion now to 1.5 billion in 2033 - the birth rate has dropped below the replacement rate of 2.1, down from 5.8 before the policy was introduced.