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						 China 
						considers ban on infant formula ads 
			
   
            
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		[April 20, 2015] 
		SHANGHAI (Reuters) - China is 
		considering a ban on advertisements for infant milk formula in a bid to 
		tackle low levels of breast feeding, the official Xinhua news agency 
		said on Monday, a potential headache for firms targeting the country's 
		near $18 billion market. 
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			 The draft would ban adverts in mass media or public places for dairy 
			products, drinks and other foods that "claim to partly or completely 
			substitute mother's milk", Xinhua said. 
			 
			Less than a third of babies are exclusively breastfed in China and 
			the number is falling despite global health bodies recommending the 
			practice for babies under six months. 
			 
			At the same time, China's infant formula market is set to grow to 
			more than $30 billion by 2017, according to consultancy Euromonitor, 
			making the country a magnet for dairy firms such as Danone SA, Mead 
			Johnson Nutrition Co and New Zealand dairy exporter Fonterra 
			Co-Operative Group Ltd. 
			
			  
			China has been cracking down on quality and corporate malpractice in 
			the sector over the last couple of years, fining mostly global milk 
			powder makers for price fixing in 2013 and probing firms for bribing 
			doctors to promote sales. 
			 
			The new proposal would mean advertisers, clients, agents and 
			publishers that violated the rule could be fined up to 1 million 
			yuan ($161,220), Xinhua said. It added the amendment to the county's 
			Advertisement Law was currently being reviewed. 
			
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			China's State Council, the country's cabinet, aims to raise the 
			exclusive breast feeding rate to 50 percent by 2020. 
			(Reporting by Adam Jourdan; Editing by Alex Richardson) 
			[© 2015 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
				reserved.] Copyright 2015 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, 
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