China considers aborting one-child policy

05 Mar 2008

By The Record

Beijing (CNA) – China is considering the elimination of its controversial one-child policy in response to an aging population and a gender imbalance created by sex-selective abortion, Reuters reports.

A girl holds a candle while praying during a Christmas Mass at a Catholic church in Hangzhou, China, on December 24, 2007. Photo: CNS

The present policy usually limits families to one child, or two children if they live in the countryside.
“We want incrementally to have this change,” Vice Minister of the
National Population and Family Planning Commission Zhao Baige told
reporters in a Beijing talk about possible changes to the policy.
"I cannot answer at what time or how, but this has become a big issue
among decision makers," Zhao added. "The attitude is to do the studies,
to consider it responsibly and to set it up systematically."
China is the world’s most populous country.  Its average fertility rate
has dropped from 5.8 children per woman in the 1970s to 1.8 children
per woman today, below the replacement rate of 2.1.
The Chinese government says its policies have prevented several hundred
million births.  However, experts have warned that its ageing
population could cause severe social problems as the elderly come to
outnumber the working population.  The policy has also caused gender
disparity from the selective abortion of girls, as male children are
preferred for traditional and economic reasons.
The gender ratio in China is still close to 120 boys for every 100 girls
Increased mobility of the nation’s about 150 million migrant workers
has weakened enforcement of the one-child policy.  Wealthy citizens are
also willing to pay the fines imposed by the policy when they have more
children, though officials have pledged to increase fines on wealthy
lawbreakers.
Enforcement of the policy has at times been draconian.  According to
human rights groups and the US government, family planning officials
have sometimes used forced abortion, coercive sterilization, and other
abuses to ensure compliance with the policy.
Reggie Littlejohn, an American attorney who advises the Brussels-based
non-governmental organisation, Human Rights Without Frontiers, spoke
with Cybercast News Service on Thursday, voicing her skepticism about
the announcement.
"Right now, the one-child policy is often implemented by forced
abortion and forced sterilization," she said. "Even if some couples in
the future are allowed to have more than one child under the new
policy, will the government still enforce that higher birth limit
through coerced abortion and sterilization?"
"The timing of this announcement is no accident," she said, noting the
announcement’s proximity to the Beijing Olympic Games and recent
concerns about China’s involvement in Darfur.
"For me, the real question is not, ‘Will the Chinese government abolish
the one-child policy,’" Littlejohn said. "The real question is, ‘Will
the Chinese government abolish its coercive birth-control practices?"
The Bush administration withholds funding from the United Nations
Population Fund because of its association with Chinese population
control programs.  According to Cybercast News Service, US law
prohibits funding for any agency that “supports or participates in the
management of a program of coercive abortion or involuntary
sterilization.”
China’s population could grow to 1.5 billion by 2033.