Births in China slide 10% to hit their lowest on record
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[October 12, 2023]
BEIJING (Reuters) - The number of births in China tumbled 10%
last year to hit their lowest level on record - a drop that comes
despite a slew of government efforts to support parents and amid
increasing alarm that the country become demographically imbalanced.
China had just 9.56 million births in 2022, according to a report
published by the National Health Commission. It was the lowest figure
since records began in 1949.
The high costs of childcare and education, growing unemployment and job
insecurity as well as gender discrimination have all helped to deter
many young couples from having more than one child or even having
children at all.
Last year, the country's population also fell for the first time in six
decades, dropping to 1.41 billion people.
That's caused domestic demographers to lament that China will get old
before it gets rich, slowing the economy as revenues drop and government
debt increases due to soaring health and welfare costs.
Much of the demographic downturn is the result of China's one-child
policy imposed between 1980 and 2015, though the abandonment of that
policy is having some effect.
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A parents pushes a stroller with a baby in a park in Shanghai,
China, April 2, 2023. REUTERS/Aly Song/File Photo
Nearly 40% of Chinese newborns last
year were the second child of a married couple, while 15% were from
families with three or more children, health authorities said.
To spur the country's flagging birth rate, Beijing has been rolling
out a raft of measures, such as efforts to increase childcare as
well as financial incentives, and President Xi Jinping in May
presided over a meeting to study the topic.
(Reporting by Ethan Wang, Albee Zhang and Bernard Orr; Editing by
Edwina Gibbs)
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