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China's two-child policy has failed to make any impact on the country's low birth rate as the number of new-borns dropped by two million last year and the decline is expected to continue, a media report said on Wednesday, 2 January.
China ended its decades-old one-child policy in 2016 and permitted couples to have two children as the population of elderly rose with declining numbers of young people.
Chinese demographers said that the number of new-borns in 2018, the third year after the country fully implemented the two-child policy, may have dropped by more than two million and the birth population will continue to fall, state-run Global Times reported on Wednesday.
“Although the national data for the birth of new-borns have not been publicised yet, data revealed by local health departments showed that the number of new-borns in 2018 decreased by at least 15 percent from the previous year,” He Yafu, a demographer and author of a book on the impact of China’s population policy, told the daily.
Yi Fuxian, a research fellow at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and Su Jian, director of the National Centre for Economic Research at Peking University, also told the daily that the figures for the number of new-borns failed to meet the health authority's expectation.
After China implemented the comprehensive two-child policy, the country's health authority predicted that the fertility rate in 2017 and 2018 would be 1.97 and 2.09 respectively.
The number of women between the ages of 20 and 39 is expected to drop by more than 39 million over the next decade, He said. "Without the introduction of measures to encourage fertility, China's population will fall drastically in the future," he said.
Chai Zhenwu, president of the China Population Association, told media in October that the number of people born will continue to fall in 2018 as well as over the next few years.
"The year of 2018 was the turning point of China's population structure, which witnessed a negative growth for the first time," Yi said.
Last August, official media reports said China's rapidly ageing population has now touched 241 million, accounting for one fifth of over 1.4 billion people in the world's most populous country.
Recent reports said China planned to completely abandon the birth control policy to encourage people to have more children.
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