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One-Child Policy Wenjia Wang

One-child policy

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Page 1: One-child policy

One-Child Policy

Wenjia Wang

Page 2: One-child policy

Who We Are

National Health and Family Planning Commission of the People’s Republic

of China

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Outline Original One-Child Policy Background Goals Trend and Effects Two-Child Policy Goals and Causes Effects Costs and Benefits Evaluation Conclusion & Recommendation

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Original One-Child Policy Background Introduced in 1979 Historical SituationChairman Mao’ Population PolicyReform and Opening-up Policy

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Original One-Child Policy Why was the policy needed Before the policy, the average amount of

children per women was 6. (overpopulation)The growth rate in 1972 was 24%China has a quarter of the world’s population

but only 7% of the world’s land. The aim is to limit China’s population to 1.2

billion by 2000.

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Original One-Child Policy Administration and

Implementation Regulations include restrictions on family

size, late marriage and childbearing At provincial and county levels devise local

strategies for implementation (for urban residents and government employees;

In rural areas.)

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Original One-child Policy Achievements

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Original One-Child Policy Negative Effects Unbalanced sex ratios Changes on Family Structure Speed population aging

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Unbalanced Sex Ratios

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Changes on Family Structure

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Population Aging

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Worsening Age Structure

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“Four-two-one” problem VS pension system

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Two-child Policy Definition

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Two-child PolicyDebate Population Explosion Little or No Effect

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Two-child Policy

Goals and Causes Balance Sex Ratios Ease Population Aging Balance Family Structure Cost and Benefits Effects

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Two-Child Policy

Costs Two-Child policy would potentially bring greater burden on households since the expense to raise children are soaring every year.

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Two-Child Policy Benefits Individual: Less Pressure Society: Labor Force

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Two-Child Policy Effects: Sex Ratio Lobar Force Releasing Aging Problem Housing

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Two-Child Policy Implementation Policy Detail (from “Shuangdu” to “Dandu”) Impact of Marriage Law (obligation on children) Pilot Provinces

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Evaluation Healthy population structure

http://investing.calsci.com/blog9-9-09.html

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Evaluation Relations with GDP

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Evaluation Relation with education level of women

(data from the UDHS 2006)

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http://www.zhihu.com/question/21908793

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Conclusion & Recommendation

Conclusion It needs to implement two-child

policy to ease the aging society pressure, balance

the sex ratios and have a health population structure;

no worry about boost of fertility rate

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Conclusion & RecommendationRecommendation

Relief living pressure for young couples

Giving Rewards Control Housing Prices

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