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China scraps fines, will let families have as many children as they’d like

beijingwalker

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China scraps fines, will let families have as many children as they’d like
PUBLISHED WED, JUL 21 202112:54 AM EDT


KEY POINTS
  • Families in China can now have as many children as they like without facing fines or other consequences, the Chinese government said late Tuesday.
  • The move followed China’s announcement on May 31 that families could now have three children each.
  • China began loosening its strict one-child policy about six years ago after imposing it in the 1980s.

BEIJING — Families in China can now have as many children as they like without facing fines or other consequences, the Chinese government said late Tuesday.

The announcement ended, in practice, decades of restrictions on the number of children each household could have, as authorities attempt to encourage births in the face of a rapidly aging population. Births dropped 15% last year, a fourth-straight year of decline.

China began loosening its strict one-child policy about six years ago after imposing it in the 1980s.

That meant for more than three decades, local authorities seeking to meet population targets often took harsh measures such as forced abortions and sterilization. Families’ preference for boys, especially in rural, farming areas, resulted in a large gender imbalance.

Families violating the one-child, and later two-child, policy faced hefty fines and difficulty finding a job. As recently as last year, state media reported local authorities fined a family 718,080 yuan ($112,200) for having seven children.

“The government will no longer charge a fine for couples who violate the family planning law to have more children than they are allowed,” state news agency Xinhua said in English, citing a government document released Tuesday evening but dated June 26.

The document also called for better maternity leave and childcare systems.

The move followed China’s announcement on May 31 that families could now have three children each. At the time, many social media users criticized the policy change for increasing the systemic challenges women would likely encounter when pursuing a professional career.

 
China one child policy is a loosely control rules...

Anybody familiar with volleyball shall known her.


4910d38f85494f0d8f91f8bea2e7d9dc.jpeg


Personal life[edit]
Zhu Ting was born to a rural family in Henan Province. She has four sisters (two older sisters and two younger sisters) and her parents do not have any sports backgrounds.
 
China one child policy is a loosely control rules...

Anybody familiar with volleyball shall known her.


4910d38f85494f0d8f91f8bea2e7d9dc.jpeg


Personal life[edit]
Zhu Ting was born to a rural family in Henan Province. She has four sisters (two older sisters and two younger sisters) and her parents do not have any sports backgrounds.
Anyway, it's a thing of the past now.
 
Finally, it was about damn time they scrapped that policy, this should definitely help offset some of the declining population problem.
 
Anyway, it's a thing of the past now.
Tells u how serious things are
China needs a feritility rate of 2.5-3.0 (2.3 is replacement)
Currently its at 1.7 with huge trend in minorities
(And some dont trust this data)
Then there is gender crisis too
 
I am waiting to see if China socialist system can reverse infertility. It will put everyone else into shame if China is successful, and will prove the supremacy of Chinese system over the rest of the world.
 
I am waiting to see if China socialist system can reverse infertility. It will put everyone else into shame if China is successful, and will prove the supremacy of Chinese system over the rest of the world.
Of course they can if CN govt promise that kids can have free food, free school till 18. The problem is just the Money to support free food, free school for kids.
 
I am waiting to see if China socialist system can reverse infertility. It will put everyone else into shame if China is successful, and will prove the supremacy of Chinese system over the rest of the world.

I think that is mostly solved these days with in-vitro.

They are simply running into the same problem most developed countries experience. People reach a certain standard of living and the cost of each additional child negatively impacts it (whether through expense or stress/effort).

Most people find it hard to go through a phase of being single and living a life of ease to being a family with a drop in their abilities. They then limit the child count to offset the drop.
 
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China one child policy is a loosely control rules...

Anybody familiar with volleyball shall known her.


4910d38f85494f0d8f91f8bea2e7d9dc.jpeg


Personal life[edit]
Zhu Ting was born to a rural family in Henan Province. She has four sisters (two older sisters and two younger sisters) and her parents do not have any sports backgrounds.


How loose ? Do you have some thing like this Indonesian family ?




:bunny: :bunny: :bunny:
 
Having more than one child in China means you belong to a rich family and three means you belong to the upper class in Chinese society
 
Having more than one child in China means you belong to a rich family and three means you belong to the upper class in Chinese society
Quite the opposite, having more than one child suggests you are a farmer from rural regions, and the more you have , the more remote the region you may come from. Xi has just one child (daughter), so do all Chinese leaders and Chinese billionaires.

6C439B776C76682F9FCE735ECA5301E25B2C579D_w900_h643.jpg
 
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Just curious that during one child policy in China, what used to happen when twins used to get born?
 
How loose ? Do you have some thing like this Indonesian family ?




:bunny: :bunny: :bunny:

That's called Overpopulation.

And the side effects of Overpopulation is the value of every soul will be going lower

In India, they lose almost 5 million people because Covid
Screenshot_20210722-130153_Chrome.jpg
 
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