China faces a looming baby boom as newly rich couples find they can afford to pay fines incurred from having more than one child, state media reported on Monday.
Upward pressure on the birth rate also is coming from millions of Chinese in their 20s and 30s, who are allowed two children under the policy because they themselves were single children, Xinhua news agency quoted China’s top family-planning official as saying.
China adopted its one-child policy in 1979 to curb population growth. It encourages late marriages and late childbearing and limits most urban couples to one child and most rural couples to two.
The government claims the policy has led to 400-million fewer births in a nation of 1,3-billion people, but it is controversial. Many families want to keep having children until a male heir is born.
National Population and Family Planning Commission director Zhang Weiqing said the number of rich people having more than one child is rapidly rising, citing a recent survey by his organisation.
He also said early marriages are on the rise again in many rural parts of the country, Xinhua reported.
Separately, growing numbers of pregnant women are risking their own lives and those of their children by seeking back-alley deliveries to avoid fines for having more than one child, Xinhua quoted Deputy Minister of Health Jiang Zuojun as saying.
Fines range from under 5Â 000 yuan ($646) to 200Â 000 yuan ($25Â 800) depending on the violator’s location and income.
Xinhua said about half of maternal deaths in east China’s Jiangxi province resulted from illegal pregnancies. — AFP