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		 China 
		adopts two-child policy 
		
		 
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		[October 29, 2015] 
		BEIJING (Reuters) - China will ease 
		family planning restrictions to allow all couples to have two children 
		after decades of the strict one-child policy, the ruling Communist Party 
		said on Thursday, a move aimed at alleviating demographic restraints on 
		the economy. 
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			 The policy is a major liberalisation of the country's family 
			planning restrictions, already eased in late 2013 when Beijing said 
			it would allow more families to have two children providing the 
			parents met certain conditions. 
			 
			A growing number of scholars had urged the government to reform the 
			rules, introduced in the late 1970s to prevent population growth 
			spiralling out of control, but now regarded as outdated and 
			responsible for shrinking China's labour pool. 
			 
			For the first time in decades the working age population fell in 
			2012, and China could be the first country in the world to get old 
			before it gets rich. 
			 
			The announcement was made at the close of a key Party meeting 
			focused on financial reforms and maintaining growth between 2016 and 
			2020 amid concerns over the country's slowing economy. 
			  
			  
			 
			"China will allow all couples to have two children, abandoning its 
			decades-long one-child policy," the official Xinhua new agency said 
			in a short report. 
			 
			There were no immediate details on the new policy or a timeframe for 
			implementation. 
			 
			Under the 2013 reform, couples in which one parent is an only child 
			were allowed to have a second child. 
			 
			Critics said the relaxation of rules was too little, and too late to 
			redress substantial negative effects of the one-child policy on the 
			economy and society. 
			 
			
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			Couples who flout family planning laws in China are, at minimum, 
			fined, some lose their jobs, and in some cases mothers are forced to 
			abort their babies or be sterilised. 
			 
			Wang Feng, a leading expert on demographic and social change in 
			China, called the change an "historic event" that would change the 
			world but said the challenges of China's aging society would remain. 
			 
			"It's an event that we have been waiting for a generation, but it is 
			one we have had to wait much too long for," Wang said. 
			 
			"It won't have any impact on the issue of the aging society, but it 
			will change the character of many young families," Wang said. 
			 
			(Reporting By Megha Rajagopalan, Ben Blanchard and Michael Martina; 
			Editing by Will Waterman) 
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