The government of China's most populous province has
rejected proposals to ease the one-child rules and allow couples
who were themselves single children to have a second
child.
The huge population prevented Henan Province from loosening the birth
control restrictions, said Deputy Governor Wang Jumei.
The population of Henan reached 97.68 million at the
end of 2005. Henan had entered a fourth birth peak, with 1.1
million babies born each year, said Wang.
The net increase in the population was more than
500,000 a year, equal to the population of a medium-sized county,
added Wang.
Henan avoided a 32.6-million
population increase between 1971 and 2004 due to the birth control
policy, according to the provincial family planning and birth
control committee.
Some local authorities in China have enacted
regulations allowing couples who were themselves only children to
have a second child.
Deputy head of Beijing Municipal Population and Family
Planning Committee Li Yunli said in September that she hoped all
"only child" couples would have a second child to help solve labor
shortages and deal with challenges represented by the aging
population.
East China's Jiangsu province had such a policy as
early as 1985.
According to the 11th five-year plan (2006-2010) on
aging, China's senior population will top 174 million by 2010,
accounting for 12.78 percent of the total population, compared with
143 million at present.
China could not rely on more
births to solve aging population issues, said Yu Xuejun with the
State Population and Family Planning Commission.
The best solutions were to boost economic development
and build an effective social security system, especially in rural
areas, Yu said.
China's family planning
policy encourages couples, apart from those of ethnic minority
groups, to have only one child to restrain population expansion.
Couples that meet certain conditions can have a second
child.
The central authorities have delegated policy-making
power on the issue to local governments.
(Xinhua News Agency November 24, 2006)
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