China
Will Have 1.45 Billion People by 2030 Due to 2-Child Policy (Image source: ndtv.com)
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China will stick to
family planning restrictions for up to 30 years, a senior Chinese official said
on Monday, rejecting concern that limits on the number of children had shrunk
the pool of workers needed to support an aging population.
Reuters report continues:
Last year, the ruling Chinese Communist Party announced it would relax its long-standing and controversial "one-child policy", allowing all couples to have two children.
Last year, the ruling Chinese Communist Party announced it would relax its long-standing and controversial "one-child policy", allowing all couples to have two children.
But
critics say the policy change comes too late to avert a dangerous population
imbalance as many couples are now not keen on having more children.
China's
population is set to peak at about 1.45 billion by 2050 when one in every three
people is expected to be more than 60 years old, with a shrinking proportion of
working adults to support them.
But
officials would adhere to family planning restrictions "for the long
term", Wang Pei'an, vice minister of the National Health and Family
Planning Commission, told a news conference.
"This
long-term adherence is at least 20 years, 30 years," Wang said.
"After
a period of time, along with demographic changes, and along with changes in the
population's socio-economic development situation, we will adopt a different
population policy."
He
said it was difficult to give a specific time on how long the restrictions on
family size would be maintained, saying it was an issue that had to be dealt
with "in line with the times".
Asked
about the danger the two-child policy would prevent China from getting rich
before it got old, Wang said an ageing population was a global problem and
"an inevitable trend of a society's development".
China's
main problem with its labour force was not the number of workers but "how
to improve the quality of workers", he said.
Wang
said there was a demographic "imbalance" in China between poorer
regions with higher fertility levels than cities, where many people are
reluctant to have more children.
The
one-child policy was introduced in the late 1970s to prevent population growth
spiralling out of control, but is now regarded as outdated and responsible for
shrinking the labour pool.
It
has also led to the problem of an aging society, with a smaller number of
productive young people, a phenomenon usually seen in industrialized countries.
With the adoption of the
two-child policy, China's labour force could rise by more than 30 million by
2050 and its aging population will be reduced by 2 percentage points by 2030,
Wang said.
China's Two-Child Policy Puts Pressure
On Sperm Banks
ChinaDaily
(Xinhua) reports that China's sperm banks are already facing a dearth of
donors, and a government proposal to end the country's decades-old one-child
policy may put more pressure on the institutions.
The
Communist Party of China Central Committee announced the scrapping of the
current one-child policy in a proposal in late October in order to balance
population growth and offset the burden of an aging population.
According
to a report carried this week by the Jiangxi Daily, a growing number of couples
with fertility problems have visited local hospitals and sperm banks for
consultations since the policy announcement.
Xue
Jie, a head nurse with the reproductive center of the Hospital affiliated with
the Nanchang Research Institute of Medical Sciences in Nanchang, capital of
east China's Jiangxi Province, said a number of couples have come to talk to
her about having a second baby with the help of sperm banks.
"Actually,
there has been a rise in the number of infertile couples who come to ask about
having a second child since [another] policy change in late 2013," Xue
told Xinhua on Sunday.
China
introduced its family planning policy in the late 1970s to rein in population
growth by limiting most urban couples to one child and most rural couples to
two, allowing the birth of a second child if the first child was a girl.
A
major policy change at the end of 2013 allowed couples nationwide to have a
second child if either parent is an only child. Since then, about 1.45 million
Chinese couples, or 13 percent of those eligible, have submitted applications
for a second child as of the end of May, according to the National Health and
Family Planning Commission.
But
the infertility rate is high in China, with statistics released by the China
Population Association at the end of 2012 showing 40 million people have
fertility issues, accounting for 12.5 percent of the population aged between 20
and 49. Many couples have turned to sperm banks for help.
Meanwhile,
sperm banks are dealing with a worsening shortage of healthy sperm, despite
repeated efforts to recruit more donors.
In
Jiangxi, the sole sperm bank in the province launched in 2013 has only received
about 1,400 qualified sperm donors out of more than 6,000 volunteers so far.
"Less
than one quarter of donors in the country are qualified," said Zhang
Duanjun, a doctor with the Jiangxi Human Sperm Bank.
The
current policy limits donors to men between the ages of 22 and 45, and their
health records and sperm quality must meet strict requirements before they can
be used for artificial insemination.
With
the imminent two-child policy, which will be ratified at the annual session of
China's top legislature in March, there could be more pressure on the
institutions.
Sperm
banks in China have tried a variety of tactics to solicit donors.
In
September, a sperm bank in Shanghai launched a campaign using the iPhone 6s to
attract donors. An ad promised up to 6,000 yuan (US$941) for 17 ml of
semen from qualified donors -- just enough to buy the latest Apple model, which
cost around 5,288 yuan when it hit stores on the Chinese mainland.
A
sperm bank in central China's Hubei Province posted a similar ad online
featuring a picture of the new rose gold iPhone 6s, hoping to overcome a
shortage in donors.
Experts
said more measures are needed to meet the high demand.
"We
suggest the government change the age limit to allow more college students to
participate, as they already make up the backbone of our donations," said
an expert with the Human Sperm Bank of central China's Hubei Province.
Liu
Shengshan, a Nanchang-based doctor, said China should improve promotion of
sperm donation for better quality of donors.
Tougher
measures are also needed to crack down on the underground sperm market, which
has profited from the scarcity of donor sperm, experts said.
"We
hope that more people will join the cause of sperm donation," said Zhang
Duanjun.
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