|
|
China's One-child
Policy Reveals Complexity, Effectiveness
July
15, 2007
Science Daily — The first systematic examination of
China’s fertility policy and practice reveals that, despite government
exemptions in rural areas, 63 percent of Chinese couples are strictly
limited to one child. Furthermore, the policy has proven remarkably
effective, with actual birth rates decreasing nearly to the mandated levels.
The study, which involved researchers in the United States and China, is the
first to use data on fertility policy and population growth collected from
420 Chinese prefectures (districts comparable to U.S. counties).
“We want to clear up confusion about the one-child policy,” said Wang Feng,
sociology professor at UC Irvine and a lead author of the study. “Despite
what some say, the policy has not been ‘relaxed’ over the years.”
Published in the current issue of the journal Population and Development
Review, the study reveals the complexity of the one-child policy. For
example, it details the kinds of exceptions within prefectures for couples
who give birth to a girl first, and for parents who themselves come from a
one-child family.
“The system of exemptions resembles the American tax code in its
complexity,” Wang said. “But this does not change the fact that the
one-child policy applies without exception to a significant majority of
Chinese couples.”
China’s average mandated fertility rate, accounting for the variety of
exceptions across the country, is 1.47 children per couple, Wang and his
collaborators found, and their analysis of census data shows the actual
fertility rate is about 1.5 children per couple.
“Such convergence between policy and reality is extraordinary, even for
China,” he said. “With the birth rate below replacement level, the country
faces serious negative consequences in the long run if it fails to phase out
the policy.”
Wang, a demographer who has studied the one-child policy for more than a
decade, notes that the law’s success is contributing
to an increasing proportion of older Chinese citizens, a shrinking
workforce, and a disproportionate number of males to females.
Except for the United States, most Western countries have below-replacement
birth rates, due not to government regulations but to factors such as
shifting family values and economic pressures, Wang says. He plans to
explore how similar motives may affect birth rates in China, even for
couples who legally can have a second or third child.
“No country has yet to reverse the trend of below-replacement birth rates,
so China’s next step regarding its one-child policy will be an important
one,” Wang says. He notes that a plan to phase out the policy does not
appear to be a government priority.
Wang’s co-authors are Gu Baochang from Renmin University of China, Guo
Zhigang from Peking University, and Zhang Erli, former
Director of Statistics and Planning of the State Family Planning Commission
of China.
Their research was funded by grants from the Ford Foundation and the John D.
and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation.
|
|
|