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One-child policy

The one-child policy (Simplified Chinese: 一孩政策) was a population planning initiative in China implemented between 1979 and 2015 to curb the country's population growth by restricting many families to a single child. The program had wide-ranging social, cultural, economic, and demographic effects, although the contribution of one-child restrictions to the broader program has been the subject of controversy.[1] Its efficacy in reducing birth rates and defensibility from a human rights perspective have been subjects of controversy.[2]

A propaganda painting in Guangdong Province promotes the idea of a nuclear family with a single child.
Birth rate in China, 1950–2015

China's family planning policies began to be shaped by fears of overpopulation in the 1970s, and officials raised the age of marriage and called for fewer and more broadly spaced births.[3] A near-universal one-child limit was imposed in 1980 and written into the country's constitution in 1982.[4][5] Numerous exceptions were established over time, and by 1984, only about 35.4% of the population was subject to the original restriction of the policy.[6]: 167  In the mid-1980s, rural parents were allowed to have a second child if the first was a daughter. It also allowed exceptions for some other groups, including ethnic minorities under 10 million people.[7] In 2015, the government raised the limit to two children, and in May 2021 to three.[8] In July 2021, it removed all limits,[9] shortly after implementing financial incentives to encourage individuals to have additional children.[10]

Implementation of the policy was handled at the national level primarily by the National Population and Family Planning Commission and at the provincial and local level by specialized commissions.[11] Officials used pervasive propaganda campaigns to promote the program and encourage compliance. The strictness with which it was enforced varied by period, region, and social status. In some cases, women were forced to use contraception, receive abortions, and undergo sterilization.[12][13] Families who violated the policy faced large fines and other penalties.[14]

The population control program had wide-ranging social effects, particularly for Chinese women. Patriarchal attitudes and a cultural preference for sons led to the abandonment of unwanted infant girls, some of whom died and others of whom were adopted abroad.[12][15] Over time, this skewed the country's sex ratio toward men and created a generation of "missing women".[15] However, the policy also resulted in greater workforce participation by women who would otherwise have been occupied with childrearing, and some girls received greater familial investment in their education.[16][17]

The Chinese Communist Party credits the program with contributing to the country's economic ascendancy and says that it prevented 400 million births, although some scholars dispute that estimate.[18] Some have also questioned whether the drop in birth rate was caused more by other factors unrelated to the policy.[18] In the West, the policy has been widely criticized for perceived human rights violations and other negative effects.[2]

Background edit

 
China's population since 1950

Since the establishment of the People's Republic of China in 1949, socialist construction was the utmost mission the state needed to accomplish. Top state leaders believed that having more population would effectively contribute to the national effort.

During Mao Zedong's leadership in China, the birth rate fell from 37 per thousand to 20 per thousand.[19] Infant mortality declined from 227 per thousand births in 1949 to 53 per thousand in 1981, and life expectancy dramatically increased from around 35 years in 1948 to 66 years in 1976.[19][20] Until the 1960s, the government mostly encouraged families to have as many children as possible,[21] especially during the Great Leap Forward, because of Mao's belief that population growth empowered the country, preventing the emergence of family planning programs earlier in China's development.[22][23][24] The state tried to incentivize more childbirths during that time with a variety of policies, such as the "Mother Heroine" (Chinese: 英雄母亲) award, a programme inspired by a similar policy in the Soviet Union.[24] As a result, the population grew from around 540 million in 1949 to 940 million in 1976.[25] Beginning in 1970, citizens were encouraged to marry at later ages and many were limited to have only two children.[26]

Although China's fertility rate plummeted faster than anywhere else in the world during the 1970s under these restrictions, the Chinese government thought it was still too high, influenced by the global debate over a possible overpopulation crisis suggested by organizations such as the Club of Rome and the Sierra Club. The fertility rate dropped from 5.9 in the 1950s and to 4.0 in the 1970s. Yet, the population still grew at a significant rate. There were approximately 541,670,000 people in China in the year 1949. The number then went up to 806,710,000 in 1969.

In the early 1970s, the state introduced a set of birth planning policies. It mainly called for later childbearing (Chinese: ; pinyin: wǎn), longer time spans between having new children (Chinese: ; pinyin: ), and giving birth to fewer children (Chinese: ; pinyin: shǎo).[27]: 57  Men were encouraged to marry at age 25 or later, and women were encouraged to marry at age 23 or later.[27]: 57 The authorities began encouraging one-child families in 1978, and in 1979 announced that they intended to advocate for one-child families. Ma Yinchu, a founder of China's population planning theory,[28] was also an intellectual architect of the policy.[29][30][31][32][33][34] In the late spring of 1979, Chen Yun became the first senior leader to propose the one-child policy.[35][36] On 1 June 1979, Chen said that:[37][38]

Comrade Xiannian proposed to me planning "better one, at most two". I'd say be stricter, stipulating that "only one is allowed". Prepare to be criticized by others for cutting off the offspring. But if we don't do it, the future looks grim.

Deng Xiaoping, then paramount leader of China, supported the policy, along with other senior leaders including Hua Guofeng and Li Xiannian.[37][39] On 15 October 1979, Deng met a British delegation led by Felix Greene in Beijing,[40][41] saying that "we encourage one child per couple. We give economic rewards to those who promise to give birth to only one child."[37]

Formulation of the policy edit

In 1980, the central government organized a meeting in Chengdu to discuss the speed and scope of one-child restrictions.[26] The notable aerospace engineer Song Jian was a participant at the Chengdu meeting. He had previously read two influential books about population concerns, The Limits to Growth and A Blueprint for Survival, while visiting Europe in 1980. Along with several associates, Song determined that the ideal population of China was 700 million, and that a universal one-child policy for all would be required to meet that goal.[42] If fertility rates remained constant at 3 births per woman, China's population would surpass 3 billion by 2060 and 4 billion by 2080.[26] In spite of some criticism inside the party, the family planning policy[43]) was formally implemented as a temporary measure on 18 September 1980.[18][44][45][46] The plan called for families to have one child each in order to curb a then-surging population and alleviate social, economic, and environmental problems in China.[47][48]

"Virtual" population crisis edit

Despite the legitimate ongoing rapid growth of China's population and the evident effects it brought to society, using the term "population crisis" to describe the situation is disputed. Scholars including Susan Greenhalgh argue that the state intentionally created a virtual population crisis in order to serve political ends.[49] According to state promotions, the looming overpopulation crisis would ruin the national agenda of achieving "China's socialist modernization", which includes industry, agriculture, national defense, and technology.[50]

China's attitude towards population control on the global stage in international forums evidenced an ambiguous stance on the nature of the crisis. In the mid-1960s, when global movements for birth control emerged, Chinese delegates expressed their opposition toward population control. In the first UN-organized World Population Conference held in Bucharest in 1969, they claimed that it was an imperialist agenda that Western countries imposed on Third World countries, and that population was not a determining factor of economic growth and a country's well-being.[51] Yet, in the domestic setting the state leaders were already wary of the perceived "population crisis" that was thought to endanger the modernization of China.[51]

It is also suggested that mathematical terms, graphs, and tables were utilized to form a convincing narrative that presents the urgency of the population problem as well as justifies the necessity of mandatory birth control across the nation.[52] Due to the previous traumas of the Cultural Revolution, public and top state leaders turned to the charisma of science, and sometimes blindly worshipped it as the solution to every problem. As a result, any proposal that was veiled and decorated by the so-called scientific back-ups would be highly considered by both the people and the state.[52]

Arguments started to come out in 1979 suggesting that the excessively rapid population growth was sabotaging the economy and destroying the environment, and essentially preventing China from being a rightful member of the global world. Skillful and deliberate comparisons were made with developed and industrialized countries such as the United States, Japan, and France.[53] Under such a comparison, China's relatively low income per capita was attributed directly to population growth and no other factors. Though the data is truthful, its arrangement and presentation to readers gave a single message determined by the state: that the population problem is a national catastrophe and immediate remedy is desperately needed.[53]

Chinese population science edit

China was deprived of data, skills, and state support to conduct population studies. Due to Mao's ambivalent attitude toward the population issue, population studies were abolished in the late 1950s. After Mao's death, family planning became a critical component and premise for reaching China's national goal: that is, to achieve "China's socialist modernization," which includes modernizing industry, agriculture, national defence, and technology.[50] Therefore, at this point, population science was closely related and tied with state politics. There was a perceived need to redefine population as a domain of science, identify the population problem in China, and propose a solution to it.[54] Such efforts included many groups of people with diverse backgrounds. Among these experts, two groups held the most influence in defining the population problem and providing a solution to it. They were a group of scientists led by Liu Zheng (刘铮), and another group led by Song Jian (宋健). Liu's group mainly came from a social science background, while Song's group came from natural science background.[55]

Social scientists edit

Social scientists involved in this discussion in the mid-1970s, including Liu Zheng (刘铮), Wu Cangping (邬沧萍), Lin Fude (林富德), and Zha Ruichuan (查瑞传), prioritized the Marxist formulation of the population problem. They saw the problem as an "imbalance between economic and demographic growth," and wished to design a reasonable policy that considered the social consequences.[54] These scientists came from the fields of social science, statistics, genetics, history, and many others. However, they had limited access to resources compared to the natural scientists who became involved in population policy making in 1978.[55] Since population studies were forbidden from the 1950s until 1979, population science had made no progress between these two decades.[54]

Natural scientists edit

Natural scientists were interested in using control theory and applying it to the actual policy. The leader of the group, Song Jian (宋健), was a control theorist at the Ministry of Aerospace Industry. He was known for his career in missile science. Yu Jingyuan (于景元) and Li Guangyuan (李广元) were trained engineers in the field of cybernetics.[55] Compared to the social scientists, this group of natural scientists had numerous advantages. They were politically protected during the Maoist period due to their importance in national defense and technology. They also had access to Western science. Eventually, they took an important role in examining the population model as well as designing the details of one-child policies.[55] After quantitative research and analysis, they showed the top state leaders that the only solution would be a policy "to encourage all couples to have only one child, regardless of the costs to individuals and society".[55]

Although Greenhalgh claims that Song Jian was the central architect of the one-child policy and that he "hijacked" the population policy making process,[56] that claim has been refuted by several leading scholars, including Liang Zhongtang (梁中堂), a leading internal critic of one-child restrictions and an eye-witness at the discussions in Chengdu.[57] In the words of Wang et al., "the idea of the one-child policy came from leaders within the Party, not from scientists who offered evidence to support it."[58] Central officials had already decided in 1979 to advocate for one-child restrictions before knowing of Song's work and, upon learning of his work in 1980, already seemed sympathetic to his position.[59]

History edit

The one-child policy was originally designed to be a "One-Generation Policy".[60] It was enforced at the provincial level and enforcement varied; some provinces had more relaxed restrictions. The one-child limit was most strictly enforced in densely populated urban areas.[61] When this policy was first introduced, 6.1 million families that had already given birth to a child were given "One Child Honorary Certificates". This was a pledge they had to make to ensure they would not have more children.[62]

Beginning in 1980, the official policy granted local officials the flexibility to make exceptions and allow second children in the case of "practical difficulties" (such as cases in which the father was a disabled serviceman) or when both parents were single children,[63] and some provinces had other exemptions worked into their policies as well. In most areas, families were allowed to apply to have a second child if their first-born was a daughter.[64][65] By 1984, only approximately 35.4% of the population fell within the policy's original restriction.[6]: 167 

Furthermore, families with children with disabilities have different policies and families whose first child suffers from physical disability, mental illness, or intellectual disability were allowed to have more children.[66] However, second children were sometimes subject to birth spacing (usually three or four years). Children born overseas were not counted under the policy if they did not obtain Chinese citizenship. Chinese citizens returning from abroad were allowed to have a second child.[67] Sichuan province allowed exemptions for couples of certain backgrounds.[68] By one estimate there were at least 22 ways in which parents could qualify for exceptions to the law towards the end of the one-child policy's existence.[69]

As of 2007, only 36% of the population were subjected to a strict one-child limit. 53% were permitted to have a second child if their first was a daughter; 9.6% of Chinese couples were permitted two children regardless of their gender; and 1.6% – mainly Tibetans – had no limit at all.[70]

 
The Danshan, Sichuan Province Nongchang Village people Public Affairs Bulletin Board in September 2005 noted that RMB 25,000 in social compensation fees were owed in 2005. Thus far 11,500 RMB had been collected, so another 13,500 RMB had to be collected.

Following the devastating 2008 Sichuan earthquake, a new exception to the regulations was announced in Sichuan for parents who had lost children in the earthquake.[71][72] Similar exceptions had previously been made for parents of severely disabled or deceased children.[73] People have also tried to evade the policy by giving birth to a second child in Hong Kong, but at least for Guangdong residents, the one-child policy was also enforced if the birth took place in Hong Kong or abroad.[74]

In accordance with China's affirmative action policies towards ethnic minorities, all non-Han ethnic groups were subject to different laws and were usually allowed to have two children in urban areas, and three or four in rural areas.[7] Han Chinese living in rural towns were also permitted to have two children.[75] Because of couples such as these, as well as those who simply paid a fine (or "social maintenance fee") to have more children,[76] the overall fertility rate of mainland China was close to 1.4 children per woman as of 2011.[77]

On 6 January 2010, the former National Population and Family Planning Commission issued the "national population development" 12th five-year plan.[78]

Enforcement edit

The one-child policy was managed by the National Population and Family Planning Commission under the central government since 1981. The Ministry of Health of the People's Republic of China and the National Population and Family Planning Commission were made defunct and a new single agency, the National Health and Family Planning Commission, took over national health and family planning policies in 2013. The agency reports to the State Council.

The policy was enforced at the provincial level through contraception, abortion, and fines that were imposed based on the income of the family and other factors. Population and Family Planning Commissions existed at every level of government to raise awareness and carry out registration and inspection work.[79][14] The fine was a so-called "social maintenance fee", the punishment for the families who had more than one child. According to the policy, families who violated the law created a burden on society. Therefore, social maintenance fees were to be used for the operation of the government.[80]

The 2019 documentary One Child Nation portrayed the experiences of enforcement, primarily focusing on rural China.[81] Enforcement of the one-child policy was more uneven in rural China.[6]: 187 

Financial edit

The Family Planning Policy was enforced through a financial penalty in the form of the "social child-raising fee," sometimes called a "family planning fine" in the West, which was collected as a fraction of either the annual disposable income of city dwellers or of the annual cash income of peasants, in the year of the child's birth.[82] For instance, in Guangdong, the fee was between three and six annual incomes for incomes below the district's per capita income, plus one to two times the annual income exceeding the average. Families were required to pay the fine.[83]

The one-child policy was a tool for China to not only address overpopulation, but to also address poverty alleviation and increase social mobility by consolidating the combined inherited wealth of the two previous generations into the investment and success of one child instead of having these resources spread thinly across multiple children.[84] This theoretically allowed for a "demographic dividend" to be realized, increasing economic growth and increasing gross national income per capita.[85]

If the family was not able to pay the "social child-raising fee", then their child would not be able to obtain a hukou, a legal registration document that was required in order to marry, attend state-funded schools, or to receive health care. Many who were unable to pay the fee never attempted to obtain their hukou for fear that the government would force extra fees upon them. Although some provinces had declared that payment of the "social child-raising fee" was not required to obtain a hukou, most provinces still required families to pay retroactive fines after registration.[86]

Contraception and sterilization edit

 
Propaganda slogan on a building at Yangxin County, Hubei, China, reading "an IUD after the first child, tubal ligation after the second"

Since the 1970s, the intrauterine device (IUD) has been of the most widely promoted and practiced forms of contraception. It was the primary alternative to sterilization. As directed, the IUD was medically implanted into women in their child-bearing years to prevent pregnancies, thus out of order births. In the 1980s, women either had to receive an IUD after giving birth to their first child, or the husband would have to undergo a vasectomy.[87] Between 1980 and 2014, 324 million Chinese women received IUDs and 108 million were sterilized.[13] By law, the IUD was placed four months after the delivery of the first child. It was only medically removed after permission to conceive is granted by the community based upon various laws and policies on childbirth quotas.[88] Despite this, some midwives illegally removed the device from their patients.[89] This led to IUD inspections, ensuring that the IUD remained in place.[90] Permanent legal removal of IUDs happens once a woman reaches menopause.[91] In 2016 as means of loosening restrictions and abolishing the one-child policy, the Chinese government now covers the price of IUD removals.[92]

The most widely used alternative to IUDs has been sterilization. As the leading form of contraception in China, sterilization has included both tubal ligation and vasectomy.[93] Starting in the early 1970s, massive sterilization campaigns swept across the country. Urban and rural birth planning and family planning services situated themselves in every community.[93] Cash payments or other material rewards and fines acted as incentives, increasing the number of participants.[88] Socially willing participants were considered role models in the community.[89] In 1983 mandatory sterilization occurred after the birth of the second or third child.[94] As the restrictions tightened a few years later, if a woman gave birth to two children, legally she had to be sterilized. Alternatively, in some cases her husband could be sterilized in her place. In other cases, sterilization of surplus children occurred.[95]

In the early years of the sterilization campaigns, abortion was a method of birth control highly encouraged by family planning.[91] With 55 percent of abortion recipients as repeat customers and the procedure easily accessible,[91] women had chosen to abort and had been forced to abort because of laws, social pressure, discovery of secret pregnancy, and community birth quotas.[88] In 1995, the People's Republic of China (PRC) warned against abortion as a means of family planning and as a contraceptive. Should an abortion be required, the woman was to have a safe procedure done by a registered physician.[95] Despite this, some women even in the 2000s chose or were encouraged to use traditional abortive products such as blister beetles, also known as Mylabris.[96] Women would ingest the toxins orally or by means of douching with the hopes of inducing abortion. An overdose could lead to death of the mother and fetus.[96] The efficacy of these products has been very low with a high mortality rate. The medical community and PRC have warned against use of these traditional methods.[91]

The priorities of individual families also played a role in the birth rate. Families debated the social and economic stability of the household prior to conception. Some families chose to follow the single-child limit due to varying social and economic factors such as marrying later, spacing out children, the cost of raising a child, the fines for having multiple children, birth control policies, and the accessibility of contraceptives.[91] In addition, those who violated the one-child policy could lose their jobs, their titles, a portion of medical insurance, and opportunities for higher education for the second child; they could also face sterilization and the labeling of the second child as a "black child".[88] All of the variables played an important role in couples' decisions on when to conceive, placing their social and economic situation above the desire to bear additional children.

Other examples of contraceptives have included the morning-after pill, birth control pills, and condoms. The morning-after pill has made up 70 percent of oral contraceptives in the Chinese market.[87] Only seven percent of Chinese women had shared that they use the pill and condom in combination.[92] The Chinese government promoted the use of IUDs and sterilization over the combined pill and condom because PRC authorities questioned the voluntary commitment of the public.[90] The Chinese government has distributed free condoms at medical clinics and health centers to adults with proof that they are 18 years of age or older. Additionally, the rate[clarification needed] and highly debated sexual education have increased awareness of sex and contraceptive measures among groups of China's young population, further lowering the birth rate.[87]

Evasion edit

Some couples paid fines to have a second or third child, and others would attempt to circumvent the policy by having non-pregnant friends take the mandatory blood tests.[97]

Propaganda edit

The National Family Planning committee developed the slogan Wan Xi Shao ('later, longer, and fewer'), which was first enacted in 1973 and was in effect until 1979.[98] This national idea encouraged later marriages and having fewer children. However, this policy was not effective at enforcing the developing ideal of having fewer children since it was such a new concept that had never been seen in other regions of the world.[99] The various problems that arose during its introduction were slowly addressed and it became progressively more targeted to corner women into limited control over their own bodies.

The Wan Xi Shao slogan emerged during the 1970s as a response to China's rapid population growth, which was viewed as a major obstacle to the country's economic and social development.[100] This slogan encapsulated three key principles: marrying later (wan, ), spacing pregnancies farther apart (xi, ), and having fewer children (shao, )[101] and was emblematic of China's national campaign of mandatory birth planning. The Chinese government aimed to reduce population growth by promoting guidelines for birth control and family planning. The government believed that having fewer children and spacing births more adequately would allow families to allocate more resources per child, resulting in better health and education outcomes for children. The policy aimed to achieve this by allowing parents more time and resources to invest in each child's health and education, as they would have fewer children to care for.[102]

The "later, longer, fewer" campaign was later replaced by the one-child policy.[100] According to Whyte and colleagues, many of the coercive techniques that became notorious after the one-child policy was launched actually date from this campaign in the 1970s.[101]

During the campaign, the state bureaucracy was in charge of enforcing birth control and oversaw birth-planning workers in every village, urban work unit, and neighborhood. These workers kept detailed records on women of child-bearing age, including past births, contraceptive usage, and menstrual cycles, often becoming "menstrual monitors" to detect out-of-quota pregnancies. In some factories, there were quotas for reproduction, and women who did not receive a birth allotment were not supposed to get pregnant.[101]

Women who became pregnant without permission were harassed to get an abortion, with pressure also put on their husbands and other family members. Families were threatened that, if they persisted in having an over-quota birth, the baby would be denied household registration, which would mean denial of ration coupons, schooling, and other essential benefits that depended upon registration. In rural areas, women who gave birth to a third child were pressured to get sterilized or have IUDs inserted, while urban women were trusted to continue using effective contraception until they were no longer fertile.[103]

Official statistics show that birth control operations, including abortions, IUD insertions, and sterilizations, increased sharply during the 1970s in association with the campaign to enforce birth limits. These drastic increases in birth-control operations suggest that highly coercive birth planning enforcement was already prevalent in both rural and urban areas, preceding the launch of the one-child policy.[104] However, during the 1970s, the Chinese government was still concerned that the Wan Xi Shao policy would not reduce the growing population sufficiently. They felt the population would grow too fast to be supported, and a one-child policy for all families was introduced in 1979.[105]

Many of the tactics used by the government were reflected in the day-to-day life of the average Chinese citizen. Since the Chinese government could not outright force its inhabitants to follow strict policy orders, the government developed strategies to encourage and promote individuals to take on this responsibility themselves. A common technique was placing an emphasis on family bonds and how having one child per family would increase emotional ties in parent-offspring relationships as well as extended family giving all their attention to fewer children.[106] While the message of population reduction was urgent and required immediate attention, it was more important for the government to stop conception and new pregnancies. The Family Planning Commission spread propaganda by placing pictures and images on everyday items.[107] Aside from signs and posters on billboards, advertisements were placed on postage stamps, milk cartons, food products and many other household items to promote the benefits of having one child.

Propaganda took many forms throughout the one-child policy era and was able to target a wide range of age demographics. Children born in this time period spent most of their lives being exposed to the new expectations placed on them by society. Educational programs were also encouraged to promote one-child policy expectations. Many young teenagers were required to read Renkou Jiayu (1981), which emphasized the importance of family planning and birth control measures that would ensure the stability of the nation.[108] Younger generations became the main target audience for much of the propaganda as the one-child policy continued, since they made up a large portion of the population that would contribute to continued growth if no policy was put in place.[109]

The one-child campaign extensively used propaganda posters. The aim of the posters was to promote the policy, encourage compliance, and emphasize the benefits of having fewer children. Many of the posters were educational in nature, paying attention to reproduction, sexuality, and conception. They were produced by various government departments, ranging from ministries of health to local population policy centers.[110]

To convey the idea that couples should only have one child, the one-child campaign utilized traditional visual elements from nianhua (New Year prints) that were popular among the people. Traditionally, these prints employ visual symbols to convey good wishes for the coming new year. In the prints, young children often have been portrayed with pink, chubby cheeks to symbolize the success of family reproduction and a hopeful future.[111][better source needed] Even without slogans, these pictures were effective in establishing a link between luck and prosperity associated with the New Year and the one-child policy. Traditional elements like chubby, healthy-looking babies resonated with people – making them believe that compliance with the policy would yield luck, good fortune, and healthy offspring. As the one-child campaign progressed, the policy was linked to national development and wealth. It was considered directly linked to the success of the policy of modernization and reform.[112]

By promoting the one-child policy on a daily basis, the government was able to convince the people that it was their duty to fulfill this nationalistic pride. Once the idea and initial steps of this policy were introduced into society, it was regulated by local policy enforcers until finally becoming an internal obligation the community accepted for the greater good of maintaining a nation. In many cases, health centers encouraged the idea of reducing the risks of pregnancy by distributing various forms of contraceptives at no cost, which made protected sex more common than unprotected sex.[108]

Material incentives edit

Couples who only had one child received healthcare subsidies (baojian fei), retirement funds, and larger grain allowances.[6]: 186 

Relaxation edit

In 2013, Deputy Director Wang Peian of the National Health and Family Planning Commission said that "China's population will not grow substantially in the short term."[113] A survey by the commission found that only about half of eligible couples wish to have two children, mostly because of the cost of living impact of a second child.[114]

In November 2013, following the Third Plenum of the 18th Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), China announced the decision to relax the one-child policy. Under the new policy, families could have two children if one parent, rather than both parents, was an only child.[115][116] This mainly applied to urban couples, since there were very few rural, only children due to long-standing exceptions to the policy for rural couples.[117] Zhejiang, one of the most affluent provinces, became the first area to implement this "relaxed policy" in January 2014,[118] and 29 out of the 31 provinces had implemented it by July 2014,[119] with the exceptions of Xinjiang and Tibet. Under this policy, approximately 11 million couples in China were allowed to have a second child; however, only "nearly one million" couples applied to have a second child in 2014,[120] less than half the expected number of 2 million per year.[119] By May 2014, 241,000 out of 271,000 applications had been approved. Officials of China's National Health and Family Planning Commission claimed that this outcome was expected, and that the "second-child policy" would continue progressing with a good start.[121]

Abolition edit

In October 2015, the Chinese news agency Xinhua[122] announced the government's plans to abolish the one-child policy, now allowing all families to have two children, citing a communiqué issued by the CCP "to improve the balanced development of population" – an apparent reference to the country's female-to-male sex ratio – and to deal with an aging population.[47][123] The new law took effect on 1 January 2016 after it was passed in the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress on 27 December 2015.[124][125][126]

The rationale for the abolition was summarized by former Wall Street Journal reporter Mei Fong: "The reason China is doing this right now is because they have too many men, too many old people, and too few young people. They have this huge crushing demographic crisis as a result of the one-child policy. And if people don't start having more children, they're going to have a vastly diminished workforce to support a huge aging population."[127] China's ratio is about five working adults to one retiree; the huge retiree community must be supported, and that will dampen future growth, according to Fong. Since the citizens of China are living longer and having fewer children, the growth of the population imbalance is expected to continue. A United Nations projection forecast that "China will lose 67 million working-age people by 2030, while simultaneously doubling the number of elderly. That could put immense pressure on the economy and government resources."[47] The longer-term outlook is also pessimistic, based on an estimate by the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, revealed by Cai Fang, deputy director. "By 2050, one-third of the country will be aged 60 years or older, and there will be fewer workers supporting each retired person."[128]

Although many critics of China's reproductive restrictions approved of the policy's abolition, Amnesty International said that the move to the two-child policy would not end forced sterilizations, forced abortions, or government control over birth permits.[129][130] Others had also stated that the abolition was not a sign of the relaxation of authoritarian control in China. A reporter for CNN said, "It was not a sign that the party will suddenly start respecting personal freedoms more than it has in the past. No, this is a case of the party adjusting policy to conditions. [...] The new policy, raising the limit to two children per couple, preserves the state's role."[131][132]

The abolition having a significant benefit was uncertain, as a CBC News analysis indicated: "Repealing the one-child policy may not spur a huge baby boom, however, in part because fertility rates are believed to be declining even without the policy's enforcement. Previous easings of the one-child policy have spurred fewer births than expected, and many people among China's younger generations see smaller family sizes as ideal."[47][133] The CNN reporter added that China's new prosperity was also a factor in the declining[128] birth rate, saying, "Couples naturally decide to have fewer children as they move from the fields into the cities, become more educated, and when women establish careers outside the home."[131]

The Chinese government had expected the abolition of the one-child rule would lead to an increase in births to about 21.9 million births in 2018. The actual number of births was 15.2 million – the lowest birth rate since 1961.[134]

On 31 May 2021, China's government relaxed restrictions even more, allowing women up to three children.[135][136][137][138] This change was brought about mainly due to the declining birth rate and population growth. Although the Chinese government was trying to spark new growth in the population, some experts did not think it would be enough.[139] Many called for the government to remove the limit altogether, though most women and couples already had adopted the idea that one child is enough and to have more is not in their best interest. Because of this new belief, the population would be likely to keep declining, which could have tragic repercussions for China in the coming decades.

All restrictions were lifted on 26 July 2021, thus allowing Chinese couples to have any number of children.[140] In 2022, the number of births in China hit another record low of 9.56 million births,[141] the first time the number had dipped below 10 million since the late 1940s according to China Daily.[142]

Public responses edit

In addition to stories of resistance to the policy and official reasons for support such as strengthening China, academic Sarah Mellors Rodriguez describes a surprising number of accounts from her fieldwork in which interviewees fully supported the mandate for personal reasons.[6]: 186  According to Mellors Rodriguez, for some couples the policy affirmed their own personal beliefs that having smaller families was wiser and more economical.[6]: 186–187 

Urban responses edit

China's urban population generally accepted the policy, given the already crowded circumstances and shortage of housing in cities.[143]: 175  Incentives offered by the state also were effective to make the urban population compliant with the newly-introduced family planning. Families that signed the single-child pledge and met the requirements of having only one child were given access to housing and daycare, while non-compliant ones would receive penalties. Examples are obstructing the parents' careers and delaying the payment of their salaries.[144]

In her fieldwork interviews, Mellors Rodriguez found that middle income urbanites were more receptive to the limitations of the policy because they generally believed that having one child and providing them with all possible opportunities was more important than having additional heirs.[6]: 169  Long-term urban residents also reported that supporting multiple children was expensive and burdensome.[6]: 169 

Rural responses edit

The rural population was more resistant to the policy[6]: 187  and variations upon the policy were permitted. Mothers of a daughter in several rural provinces were allowed to have a single additional child (a "1.5-child" policy) and families in remote areas a second or third child.[145] After collective co-ops were dismantled and decollectivization took place, children became more valued by their parents, as a source of agricultural production, and as a source of the care required by ageing parents. Due to the inherently patrilocal nature of marriage, it was expected that daughters would leave their parents and contribute labor to their husbands' households. The consequent preference for sons came into conflict with the one-child policy and government enforcement of this policy.[146]

Coercive enforcement measures were taken, and included abortions of "over-quota" pregnancies, and sterilization of women. This led to a series of physical conflicts with the government cadres who were assigned to enforce the policy in a specific rural area. Rural families wished to add sons to their families in order to contribute to agricultural production.[146] But the cadres came on the way in conflict with them. Many cadres were middle-aged women who went through the collective period when childbearing was encouraged. They experienced continuous childbearing, and so were strongly supportive of the one-child policy. When these two distinct groups disapproved of each other, conflicts came. More than that, rural families that were desperate to have a son would abuse women who could not give birth to one. They also abandoned infant girls and even engaged in infanticide. As a result, societal relationships were tense within families and also between the cadres and people.[146]

Since the 1990s, rural policy violations decreased sharply.[6]: 193  Anthropologist Yan Yunxiang attributes this decrease to greater acceptance of family planning among the new generation of parents, as well as their increased prioritization of material comforts and individual happiness.[6]: 193 

Effects edit

Population edit

Below are the results of the first three National Population Census of the People's Republic of China (中华人民共和国全国人口普查). The first two censuses date back to the 1950s and 1960s, and the last one in the 1980s. They were conducted in 1953, 1964, and 1982 respectively.[147]

Pre-policy statistics
1st Census (1953)[148] 2nd Census (1964)[149] 3rd Census (1982)[150]
Total population 601,938,035 723,070,269 1,031,882,511
Male population (proportion of total) 297,553,518

(51.82%)

356,517,011

(51.33%)

519,433,369

(51.5%)

Female population (proportion of total) 276,652,422

(48.18%)

338,064,748

(48.67%)

488,741,919

(48.5%)

Below are the results of population investigation after the implementation of one-child policy.

Post-policy statistics
4th Census (1990)[151] 2005 Population Sample Survey

(2005年全国1%人口抽样调查)[152]

6th Census (2010)[153]
Total population 1,160,017,381 1,306,280,000 1,370,536,875
Male population (proportion of total) 584,949,922

(51.6%)

673,090,000

(51.53%)

686,852,572

(51.27% )

Female population (proportion of total) 548,732,579

(48.4%)

633,190,000

(48.47%)

652,872,280

(48.73%)

Fertility reduction edit

 
The progression of China's population pyramid, International Futures

The total fertility rate in China continued its fall from 2.8 births per woman in 1979 (already a sharp reduction from more than five births per woman in the early 1970s) to 1.5 by the mid-1990s. Some scholars claim that this decline is similar to that observed in other places that had no one-child restrictions, such as Thailand as well as the Indian states of Kerala and Tamil Nadu, a claim designed to support the argument that China's fertility might have fallen to such levels anyway without draconian fertility restrictions.[58][154][155][156]

According to a 2017 study in the Journal of Economic Perspectives, "the one-child policy accelerated the already-occurring drop in fertility for a few years, but in the longer term, economic development played a more fundamental role in leading to and maintaining China's low fertility level".[157] However, a more recent study found that China's fertility decline to very low levels by the mid-1990s was far more impressive given its lower level of socio-economic development at that time;[158] even after taking rapid economic development into account, China's fertility restrictions likely averted over 500 million births between 1970 and 2015, with the portion caused by one-child restrictions possibly totaling 400 million.[159] Fertility restrictions also had other unintended consequences, such as a deficit of 40 million female babies. Most of this deficit was due to sex-selective abortion as well as the 1.5 child stopping rule, which required rural parents to stop childbearing if their first born was a son.[160] Another consequence was the acceleration of the aging of China's population.[161][162]

Disparity in sex ratio at birth edit

 
The sex ratio at birth in People's Republic of China, males per 100 females, 1980–2010.

The sex ratio of a newborn infant (between male and female births) in mainland China reached 117:100, and stabilized between 2000 and 2013, about 10% higher than the baseline, which ranges between 103:100 and 107:100. It had risen from 108:100 in 1981—at the boundary of the natural baseline—to 111:100 in 1990.[163] According to a report by the National Population and Family Planning Commission, there would be 30 million more men than women in 2020, potentially leading to social instability, and courtship-motivated emigration.[164] The estimate of 30 million cited for the sex disparity, however, may have been very exaggerated, as birth statistics have been skewed by late registrations and unreported births: for instance, researchers have found that census statistics for women in later stages of life do not match the birth statistics.[165][166]

The disparity in the gender ratio at birth increased dramatically after the first birth, for which the ratios remained steadily within the natural baseline over the 20-year interval between 1980 and 1999. Thus, a large majority of couples appeared to accept the outcome of the first pregnancy, whether it was a boy or a girl. If the first child was a girl, and they were able to have a second child, then a couple may have taken extraordinary steps to assure that the second child was a boy. If a couple already had two or more boys, the sex ratio of higher parity births swung decidedly in a feminine direction. This demographic evidence indicates that while families highly valued having male offspring, a secondary norm of having a girl or having some balance in the sexes of children often came into play. Zeng (1993) reported a study based on the 1990 census in which they found sex ratios of just 65 or 70 boys per 100 girls for births in families that already had two or more boys.[167] A study by Anderson & Silver (1995) found a similar pattern among both Han and non-Han nationalities in Xinjiang Province: a strong preference for girls in high parity births in families that had already borne two or more boys.[168] This tendency to favour girls in high-parity births to couples who had already borne sons was later also noted by Coale and Banister, who suggested as well that once a couple had achieved its goal for the number of males, it was also much more likely to engage in "stopping behavior", i.e., to stop having more children.[169]

The long-term disparity led to a significant gender imbalance or skewing of the sex ratio. As reported by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation in 2015, China had between 32 million and 36 million more males than would be expected naturally, and this led to social problems. "Because of a traditional preference for baby boys over girls, the one-child policy is often cited as the cause of China's skewed sex ratio [...] Even the government acknowledges the problem and has expressed concern about the tens of millions of young men who won't be able to find brides and may turn to kidnapping women, sex trafficking, other forms of crime or social unrest."[47] The situation was not expected improve in the near future. According to the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, there would be 24 million more men than women of marriageable age by 2020.[170]

As the gender gap became more prominent due to the preference of male children over female offspring, policy enforcers shifted their attention to promoting the benefits that came with having daughters. In rural, isolated regions of China, the government provided families with a daughter more access to education and other resources such as job opportunities to parents in order to encourage the idea that having a daughter also has a positive impact on the family.[171]

In December 2016, researchers at the University of Kansas reported that the sex disparity in China was likely exaggerated due to administrative under-reporting and delayed registration of females, rather than abortion and infanticide. The finding concluded that as many as 10 to 15 million missing women had not been properly registered at birth since 1982.[172][173] The study found that the sex ratios of age groups during the one-child policy were similar to those born in the period without the single-child policy. The study also found significant amounts of females appear after the age of ten due to late registration across different age groups.[174] The reason for under-reporting was attributed to families trying to avoid penalties when girls are born and local government concealing the lack of enforcement from the central government. This implied that the sex disparity of the Chinese newborns was likely exaggerated significantly in previous analyses.[174] Though the degree of data discrepancy, the challenge in relation to the sex-ratio imbalance in China is still disputed among scholars.[175][176][177]

Education edit

The one-child policy has been a factor in China's rapid increase in higher educational attainment.[27]: 59 

Research shows that a stricter fertility policy would induce higher female educational achievement.[17] Prior to the one-child policy, roughly 30% of women attended higher education, whereas between 1990 and 1992, 50 percent of students in higher education were women. The higher participation rate of women in education could be attributed to the lack of male siblings. As a result, families invested in their single female child.[178] Several studies conclude that girls on average received more years of schooling thanks to the one child policy.[27]: 69 

Adoption and abandonment edit

 
A roadside sign in rural Sichuan: "It is forbidden to discriminate against, abuse or abandon baby girls."

The one-child policy prompted the growth of orphanages in the 1980s.[179] For parents who had "unauthorized" births, or who wanted a son but had a daughter, giving up their child for adoption was a strategy to avoid penalties under one-child restrictions. Many orphanages witnessed an influx of baby girls, as families would abandon them in favor of having a male child.[15] Many families also kept their illegal children hidden so that they would not be punished by the government.[180] In fact, "out adoption" was not uncommon in China even before birth planning. In the 1980s, adoptions of daughters accounted for slightly above half of the so-called "missing girls", as out-adopted daughters often went unreported in censuses and surveys, while adoptive parents were not penalized for violating the birth quota.[181] However, in 1991, a central decree attempted to close off this loophole by raising penalties and levying them on any household that had an "unauthorized" child, including those which had adopted children.[180] This closing of the adoption loophole resulted in the abandonment of some two million Chinese children, most of whom were daughters;[158] many of these children ended up in orphanages, with approximately 120,000 of them being adopted by parents from abroad.

The peak wave of abandonment occurred in the 1990s, with a smaller wave after 2000.[180] Around the same time, poor care and high mortality rates in some state orphanages generated intense international pressure for reform.[182][183]

After 2005, the number of international adoptions declined, due both to falling birth rates and the related increase in demand for adoptions by Chinese parents themselves. In an interview with National Public Radio on 30 October 2015, Adam Pertman, president and CEO of the National Center on Adoption and Permanency,[184] indicated that "the infant girls of yesteryear have not been available, if you will, for five, seven years. China has been ... trying to keep the girls within the country ... And the consequence is that, today, rather than those young girls who used to be available – primarily girls – today, it's older children, children with special needs, children in sibling groups. It's very, very different."[185]

Transnational adoption edit

In April of 1992, China implemented laws that enabled foreigners to adopt their orphan children, with the number of children each orphanage could offer for international adoption being limited by the China Center of Adoption Affairs. That same year, 206 children were adopted to the United States, according to the U.S State Department.[186] Since then, the demand for healthy infant girls increased and transnational adoption increased rapidly. In accordance with this high demand, China began defining more restrictions on foreign adoption, including limitations on applicant's age, marital status, mental and physical health, income, family size, and education.[186] According to the U.S State Department, there have been over 80,000 international adoptions from China since international adoptions were implemented.

As the flow of foreigners adopting from China increased, so did illicit adoption practices. Families in China that did not or could not keep their child would often be subject to abandonment or infanticide. Abandoned babies often found themselves in orphanages, ready to be adopted. This also made it easy for governments to engage in the trafficking of children. In the years between 2002 and 2005, officials in Hunan and Guangdong provinces profited from the buying and trafficking of approximately 1,000 abducted babies for international adoption.[186]

Twins edit

Since there were no penalties for multiple births,[27]: 58  it was believed that an increasing number of couples were turning to fertility medicine to induce the conception of twins. According to a 2006 China Daily report, the number of twins born per year was estimated to have doubled.[timeframe?][187] A 2016 study concluded that the increase in the policy fine of one year's income is associated with an increase in twin births by approximately 0.07 per 1,000 births, indicating that at least one-third of the increase in twins since the 1970s could be explained by the one-child policy.[188]

Quality of life for women edit

The increase in the number of only-child girls resulted in gradual changes in social norms regarding gender, including a decrease in the inequalities between women and men.[189]: 66 

The one-child policy's limit on the number of children resulted in new mothers having more resources to start investing money in their own well-being. As a result of being an only child, women had increased opportunities to receive an education and support to get better jobs. One side effect of the one-child policy was the liberation of women from the significant duties of taking care of many children and the family in the past; instead, women have had more time for themselves to pursue their career or hobbies. The other major side effect of the policy was that the traditional concepts of gender roles between men and women have weakened. Being one and the only "chance" the parents have, women have been expected to compete with peer men for better educational resources or career opportunities. Especially in cities where the one-child policy was much more regulated and enforced, expectations for women to succeed in life are no less than for men. Recent[when?] data has shown that the proportion of women attending college is higher than that of men. The policy also had a positive effect at 10 to 19 years of age on the likelihood of completing senior high school in women of Han ethnicity. At the same time, the one-child policy reduced the economic burden for each family. The average conditions for each family improved. As a result, women also have had much more freedom within the family. They have been supported by family to pursue life achievements.[190] Mothers who complied with the policy were able to have longer maternity leave periods as long as they were older than 24.[191] The government encouraged couples to start family planning at an older age. Since many of these women were employed, the incentive to have later births was to provide paid leave as long as they followed the expectation of having one child. However, if they happened to have a second pregnancy they were stripped of their privileges and were not given the same resources compared to their first birth. During this time period[when?], another shift in attitude towards women was the harsh punishment they would receive if they acted against the newly established policy. In areas such as Shanghai, women faced similar punishments as men, while before the Revolution they tended to have more lenient penalties.[192]

Women's experiences of the one-child policy shaped their perceptions of it, both of which have been studied extensively by researchers. These studies have revealed a variety of perspectives. While some women viewed the policy as beneficial, particularly in terms of providing better educational and employment opportunities for their children, others experienced significant negative effects, including gender-based discrimination, psychological distress, and social stigma as a byproduct of the policy. One study by Greenhalgh et al. (2005) found that many urban women in China perceived the one-child policy as positive, as it allowed them to have greater control over their reproductive health and career trajectories. These women also valued the educational and economic opportunities afforded to their single child, which were seen as providing a pathway out of poverty and towards upward mobility.[16] However, the same study also found that women's perceptions of the one-child policy were heavily influenced by their social and economic circumstances. For example, women who were unable to afford the fines associated with violating the policy were more likely to form negative perceptions, as were women who faced pressure from their families to have a male child.[112] Another study by Poston and Glover (2005) found that women in rural China were more likely to view the policy as negative. These women reported experiencing significant pressure to have a male child, and those who were unable to do so faced social stigma and discrimination.[193] In addition, women who violated the policy by having a second child were subject to fines, job loss, and other penalties, which could have significant economic and social consequences.[193] A study by Mosher (2012) found that women who underwent forced abortions or sterilizations as a result of the one-child policy experienced significant psychological distress, including depression, anxiety, and trauma.[194] These women reported feeling violated and traumatized by the forced abortions and sterilizations that occurred as a byproduct of the one-child policy. Such experiences could have long-lasting effects on their mental health and wellbeing.[194] Taken together, these studies suggest that women's diverse perceptions of the one-child policy were based on their individual experiences with it. These experiences were heavily dependent on women's social and economic circumstances, which led to varied perceptions and attitudes on the policy. While some women perceived it as positive, particularly in urban areas, others experienced significant negative effects, including psychological distress and social stigma.

Healthcare improvements edit

The one-child policy contributed to China's decrease in maternal and child mortality.[189]: 66 

It is reported that the focus of China on population planning has helped to provide better healthcare for women and a reduction in the risks of death and injury associated with pregnancy. Women and children were eligible for preferential hospital treatment. At family planning offices, women received free contraception and prenatal classes that contributed to the policy's success in two respects. First, the average Chinese household has expended fewer resources, both in terms of time and money, on children, giving many more money to invest. Second, since Chinese adults would no longer rely on children to care for them in their old age, there has been an impetus to save money for the future.[195]

"Four-two-one" problem edit

 
A government sign in Tangshan Township: "For a prosperous, powerful nation and a happy family, please practice family planning."

As the first generation of legally enforced only-children came of age to become parents themselves, one adult child was left with having to provide support for his or her two parents and four grandparents.[196][197] Called the "4-2-1 Problem", this leaves the older generations with increased chances of dependency on retirement funds or charity in order to receive support. If not for personal savings, pensions, or state welfare, most senior citizens would be left entirely dependent upon their very small family or neighbors for assistance. If for any reason, the single child is unable to care for their older adult relatives, the oldest generations would face a lack of resources and necessities. In response to such an issue, by 2007, all provinces in the nation except Henan had adopted a new policy allowing couples to have two children if both parents were only children themselves;[198][failed verification][199] Henan followed in 2011.[200]

Impact on elder care edit

China's one-child policy had significant implications for many aspects of Chinese society, including care for elderly populations. In "Gender and elder care in China: the influence of filial piety and structural constraints," authors Zhan and Montgomery suggest that the decline of traditional family support networks began with the establishment of work units in the socialist period.[201] These collectives were meant to offer healthcare and housing to their workers. With the economic reforms of the 1980s and 1990s, many of the work units dissolved, leaving many elderly workers without the social support they once had.[201] This was exacerbated by the one-child policy because many families now only had one child to care for elderly parents, leading to increased pressure and responsibility for the sole caregiver.[201]

According to a study by Gustafson (2014), the one-child policy has led to a significant decrease in the availability of family caregivers for the elderly in China.[202] So, tens of millions of retirees now only have one child to rely on for care. This has led to an "inverted pyramid," in which two sets of elderly parents must rely on a single married couple of two adult children (each of whom is an only child with no siblings), who in turn have produced a single child on whom the family must eventually rely on in the next generation.

The one-child policy in China has had a significant impact on filial piety and elder care. Filial piety is a traditional Confucian value that emphasizes respect, obedience, and care for one's parents and elders.[203] However, the one-child policy has led to a smaller pool of potential caregivers for elderly parents, and has also contributed to a shift in attitudes toward elder care.[204][205]

One study found that the one-child policy has led to a decline in filial piety in China, as fewer children are responsible for caring for their elderly parents. The study also found that the one-child policy has led to a shift in the responsibility for elder care from the family to the state.[205] For example, Feng argued in 2010 that the Chinese government had increased efforts to build residential elder care services by actively promoting the construction of senior housing, homes for the aged, and nursing homes.[205] This included government-sponsored subsidies to spur construction and operation of new facilities.[205] The Virtual Elder Care Home[clarification needed] has gained popularity, which features home-care agencies providing a wide range of personal care and homemaker services in elders' homes.[205] Services are initiated by phone calls to a local government-sponsored information and service center, which then directs a qualified service provider to the elder's home. Participating providers contract with the local government and are reimbursed for services purchased by the government on behalf of eligible care recipients.[205] While these programs are mainly centered in urban areas, current policy directives in rural areas favor institutions by encouraging "centralized support and care" in rural homes that are run and subsidized by the local government.[205] For rural elders who do not have the option to turn to residential facilities, many have resorted to signing a "family support agreement" contract with adult children to ensure needed support and care.[205]

Furthermore, another study found that the one-child policy has had a significant impact on the quality of elder care in China, with many elderly parents reporting feeling neglected and abandoned by their adult children. This is due to a lack of resources and support from the younger generation.[206]

Unregistered children edit

Heihaizi (Chinese: 黑孩子; pinyin: hēiháizi) or 'black child' is a term denoting children born outside the one-child policy, or generally children who are not registered in the Chinese national household registration system.

Being excluded from the family register means they do not possess a hukou, which is "an identifying document, similar in some ways to the American social security card".[207] In this respect they do not legally exist and as a result cannot access most public services, such as education and health care, and do not receive protection under the law.[208][209][210]

Potential social problems & "little emperor" phenomenon edit

In urban areas especially, a byproduct of the one-child policy has been changing family dynamics. Traditionally, grandparents had been the focal point of the family in China: they were adored by all family members, and were the ones who exercised decision-making in the day-to-day life of the family.[211] Feng suggests that the implementation of the one-child policy and the resulting numbers of one-child families have greatly reduced the multigenerational family form and has weakened the central position of elders in the family.[211] Feng also suggests that the one-child policy has caused parents to spend less leisure time alone, and more leisure time with their children. Feng writes, "[t]he children tend to rely more so on their parents as companions and to participate together in recreational activities." He continues, "[t]his has promoted an equality in the parent-child relationship and has restricted to a certain extent the interactions of children with others."[211] In the one-child family, the core is the parent-child relationship and research suggests that the husband-wife relationship has been less emphasized and cultivated as a result.[212] In China, the one-child policy has been associated with the term "little emperor," which describes the perceived effects of parents focusing their attention exclusively on their only child. The term gained popularity as a way to suggest that only children may become "spoiled brats" due to the excess attention they receive from their parents.[211]

A study by Cameron and colleagues explored this phenomenon, finding that the one-child policy had behavioral impacts on only children. The authors tested Beijing youths born in several birth cohorts just before and just after the launch of the one-child policy using economic games designed to detect differences in desirable social behaviors like trust and altruism. The study found that only children in China were more likely to exhibit narcissistic and selfish behavior compared to those with siblings.[213] The study also found that only children had higher levels of academic achievement, but lower levels of social competence and empathy.[213] Overall, these findings suggest that the one-child policy had unintended social and psychological consequences that may have lasting effects on Chinese society as a whole.

Other scholarship supports that the "little emperor" phenomenon does exist. Jiao and colleagues compared children between the ages of four and ten from urban and suburban areas of Beijing using peer ratings of cooperativeness, leadership, and other desirable traits. When they analyzed a matched sample of only children and children with siblings from similar backgrounds, they reported constant patterns in which the only children were rated less positively.[214]

However, researchers Chen and Jin outline some of the arguably positive byproducts of this "little emperor" phenomenon. They suggest that, since only children receive more attention and resources from their parents, it can lead to improved academic performance and overall success in life.[206]

With the first generation of children born under the policy (which initially became a requirement for most couples with first children born starting in 1979 and extending into the 1980s) reaching adulthood, such worries were reduced.[215]

Toni Falbo, a professor of educational psychology and sociology at the University of Texas at Austin came to the conclusion that no measurable differences exist in terms of sociability and characterization between singleton children and multi-sibling children except that single children scored higher on intelligence and achievement – due to a lack of "dilution of resources".[216]

Some 30 delegates called on the government in the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference in March 2007 to abolish the one-child rule, citing "social problems and personality disorders in young people". One statement read, "It is not healthy for children to play only with their parents and be spoiled by them: it is not right to limit the number to two children per family, either."[217] The proposal was prepared by Ye Tingfang, a professor at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, who suggested that the government at least restore the previous rule that allowed couples to have up to two children. According to a scholar, "The one-child limit is too extreme. It violates nature's law and, in the long run, this will lead to mother nature's revenge."[217][218]

Birth tourism edit

Reports surfaced of Chinese women giving birth to their second child overseas, a practice known as birth tourism. Many went to Hong Kong, which is exempt from the one-child policy. Likewise, a Hong Kong passport differs from China's mainland passport by providing additional advantages.[example needed] Recently[when?] though, the Hong Kong government has drastically reduced the quota of births set for non-local women in public hospitals.

As the United States practices birthright citizenship, all children born in the US automatically have US citizenship at birth. The closest US location from China is Saipan in the Northern Mariana Islands, a US dependency in the western Pacific Ocean that generally allows Chinese citizens to visit for 14 days without requiring a visa. As of 2012, the Northern Mariana Islands were experiencing an increase in births by Chinese citizens because birth tourism there had become cheaper than in Hong Kong. This option is used by relatively affluent Chinese who may want their children to have the option of living in the US as adults.[219][220]

Sex-selective abortion edit

Due to the preference in rural Chinese society to give birth to a son,[221] prenatal sex discernment and sex-selective abortions are illegal in China.[222] It is often argued as one of the key factors in the imbalanced sex ratio in China, as excess female infant mortality and under-reporting of female births cannot solely explain this gender disparity.[223] Researchers found that the gender of the firstborn child in rural parts of China impacted whether or not the mother would seek an ultrasound for the second child. 40% of women with a firstborn son sought an ultrasound for their second pregnancy, versus 70% of women with firstborn daughters. This represented a desire for women to have a son if one had not yet been born.[224] In response to this, the Chinese government made sex-selective abortions illegal in 2005.[224]

In China, male children have always been favored over female children. With the one-child policy in place, many parents often chose abortions to meet the one-child standard as well as for the satisfaction of having a male son.[225] Male offspring were preferred in rural areas to ensure parents' security in their old age since daughters were expected to marry and support their husbands' family. A common saying in rural areas was Yang'er Fang Lao, which translates to 'rear a son for your old age'.[226] After the initial forced sterilization and abortion campaign in 1983, citizens of urban areas in China disagreed with the standards being placed on them by the government and having complete disregard for basic human rights.[227] This led to the Chinese government straying away from the forced sterilization processes in attempts to encourage civilian compliance.

Savings rate edit

The one-child policy has been a factor behind China's high urban household savings rate.[27]: 59 

Criticism edit

The policy was controversial outside China for many reasons, including accusations of human rights abuses in the implementation of the policy, as well as concerns about negative social consequences.[2]

Statement of the effect of the policy on birth reduction edit

The Chinese government, quoting Zhai Zhenwu, director of Renmin University's School of Sociology and Population in Beijing, estimates that 400 million births were prevented by the one-child policy as of 2011, while some demographers challenge that number, putting the figure at perhaps half that level, according to CNN.[a] Zhai clarified that the 400 million estimate referred not just to the one-child policy, but includes births prevented by predecessor policies implemented one decade before, stating that "there are many different numbers out there but it doesn't change the basic fact that the policy prevented a really large number of births".[18]

This claim is disputed by Wang Feng, director of the Brookings-Tsinghua Center for Public Policy, and Cai Yong from the Carolina Population Center at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.[18] Wang argues that "Thailand and China have had almost identical fertility trajectories since the mid 1980s", and "Thailand does not have a one-child policy".[18] China's Health Ministry has also disclosed that at least 336 million abortions were performed on account of the policy.[228]

According to a report by the US embassy, scholarship published by Chinese scholars and their presentations at the October 1997 Beijing conference of the International Union for the Scientific Study of Population seemed to suggest that market-based incentives or increasing voluntariness is not morally better but that it is, in the end, more effective.[229] In 1988, Zeng Yi and Professor T. Paul Schultz of Yale University discussed the effect of the transformation to the market on Chinese fertility, arguing that the introduction of the contract responsibility system in agriculture during the early 1980s weakened family planning controls during that period.[230] Zeng contended that the "big cooking pot" system of the People's Communes had insulated people from the costs of having many children. By the late 1980s, economic costs and incentives created by the contract system were already reducing the number of children farmers wanted.

A long-term experiment in a county in Shanxi, in which the family planning law was suspended, suggested that families would not have many more children even if the law were abolished.[69] A 2003 review of the policy-making process behind the adoption of the one-child policy shows that less intrusive options, including those that emphasized delay and spacing of births, were known but not fully considered by China's political leaders.[231]

Unequal enforcement edit

Corrupted government officials and especially wealthy individuals have often been able to violate the policy in spite of fines.[232] Filmmaker Zhang Yimou had three children and was subsequently fined 7.48 million yuan ($1.2 million).[233] For example, between 2000 and 2005, as many as 1,968 officials in Hunan province were found to be violating the policy, according to the provincial family planning commission; also exposed by the commission were 21 national and local lawmakers, 24 political advisors, 112 entrepreneurs and 6 senior intellectuals.[232]

Some of the offending officials did not face penalties,[232] although the government did respond by raising fines and calling on local officials to "expose the celebrities and high-income people who violate the family planning policy and have more than one child".[232] Also, people who lived in the rural areas of China were allowed to have two children without punishment, although the family is required to wait a couple of years before having another child.[234]

Human rights violations edit

The one-child policy had been challenged for violating a human right to determine the size of one's own proper family. According to a 1968 proclamation of the International Conference on Human Rights, "Parents have a basic human right to determine freely and responsibly the number and the spacing of their children."[235][236]

According to the UK newspaper The Daily Telegraph, a quota of 20,000 abortions and sterilizations was set for Huaiji County, Guangdong in one year due to reported disregard of the one-child policy. According to the article local officials were being pressured into purchasing portable ultrasound devices to identify abortion candidates in remote villages. The article also reported that women as far along as 8.5 months pregnant were forced to abort, usually by an injection of saline solution.[237] A 1993 book by social scientist and anti-abortion political activist Steven W. Mosher reported that women in their ninth month of pregnancy, or already in labour, were having their children killed whilst in the birth canal or immediately after birth.[238]

According to a 2005 news report by Australian Broadcasting Corporation correspondent John Taylor, China outlawed the use of physical force to make a woman submit to an abortion or sterilization in 2002 but ineffectively enforced the measure.[239] In 2012, Feng Jianmei, a villager from Shaanxi province, was forced into an abortion by local officials after her family refused to pay the fine for having a second child. Chinese authorities later apologized and two officials were fired, while five others were sanctioned.[240]

In the past, China promoted eugenics as part of its population-planning policies, but the government backed away from such policies, as evidenced by China's ratification of the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, which compels the nation to significantly reform its genetic testing laws.[241] Recent[when?] research has also emphasized the necessity of understanding a myriad of complex social relations that affect the meaning of informed consent in China.[242] Furthermore, in 2003, China revised its marriage registration regulations and couples no longer have to submit to a premarital physical or genetic examination before being granted a marriage license.[243]

The United Nations Population Fund's (UNFPA) support for family planning in China, which had been associated in the United States with the one-child policy, led the U.S. Congress to pull out of the UNFPA during the Reagan administration,[244] and again under George W. Bush's presidency, citing human rights abuses[245] and stating that the right to "found a family" was protected under the Preamble in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.[246] Barack Obama resumed U.S. government financial support for the UNFPA shortly after taking office in 2009, intending to "work collaboratively to reduce poverty, improve the health of women and children, prevent HIV/AIDS and provide family planning assistance to women in 154 countries".[247][248]

Effect on infanticide rates edit

Sex-selective abortion, abandonment, and infanticide are illegal in China. Nevertheless, the US Department of State,[249] the Parliament of the United Kingdom,[250] and the human rights organization Amnesty International[251] have all declared that infanticide still exists.[252][253] A writer for the Georgetown Journal of International Affairs wrote, "The 'one-child' policy has also led to what Amartya Sen first called 'Missing Women', or the 100 million girls 'missing' from the populations of China (and other developing countries) as a result of female infanticide, abandonment, and neglect".[254]

The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation offered the following summary as to the long-term effects of sex-selective abortion and abandonment of female infants:

Multiple research studies have also found that sex-selective abortion – where a woman undergoes an ultrasound to determine the sex of her baby, and then aborts it if it's a girl – was widespread for years, particularly for second or subsequent children. Millions of female fetuses have been aborted since the 1970s. China outlawed sex selective abortions in 2005, but the law is tough to enforce because of the difficulty of proving why a couple decided to have an abortion. The abandonment, and killing, of baby girls has also been reported, though recent research studies say it has become rare, in part due to strict criminal prohibitions.[47]

Anthropologist G. William Skinner at the University of California, Davis and Chinese researcher Yuan Jianhua have claimed that infanticide was fairly common in China before the 1990s.[255]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Some demographers challenge that number, putting the figure at perhaps half that level.

References edit

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Further reading edit

  • Aird, John S. (1990). Slaughter of the Innocents: Coercive Birth Control in China. Washington, DC: AEI Press. ISBN 9780844737034.
  • Alpermann, Björn; Zhan, Shaohua (2019). "Population Planning after the One-Child Policy: Shifting Modes of Political Steering in China". Journal of Contemporary China. 28 (117): 348–366. doi:10.1080/10670564.2018.1542218. hdl:10356/139594. ISSN 1067-0564. S2CID 158747503.
  • Better 10 Graves Than One Extra Birth: China's Systemic Use of Coercion To Meet Population Quotas. Washington, DC: Laogai Research Foundation. 2004. ISBN 978-1-931550-92-5.
  • Cai, Yong; Feng, Wang (2021). "The Social and Sociological Consequences of China's One-Child Policy". Annual Review of Sociology. 47 (1): 587–606. doi:10.1146/annurev-soc-090220-032839. ISSN 0360-0572. S2CID 235521373.
  • Feng, Wang; Cai, Yong; Gu, Baochang (2013). "Population, Policy, and Politics: How Will History Judge China's One-Child Policy?". Population and Development Review. 38: 115–129. doi:10.1111/j.1728-4457.2013.00555.x. ISSN 0098-7921. JSTOR 23655290.
  • Fong, Mei (2015). One Child: The Past and Future of China's Most Radical Experiment. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. ISBN 978-0-544-27539-3. Interview with Mei on her challenges writing the book.
  • Hardee-Cleaveland, Karen (1988). Family Planning in China: Recent Trends, Volume 3. Center for International Research, U.S. Bureau of the Census.
  • Goh, Esther C.L. (2011). (PDF). Journal of International and Global Studies. New York: Routledge. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 May 2012.
  • Greenhalgh, Susan (2008). Just One Child: Science and Policy in Deng's China (illustrated ed.). University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-25339-1.
  • Ling, Chai (2011). A Heart for Freedom: The Remarkable Journey of a Young Dissident, Her Daring Escape, and Her Quest to Free China's Daughters. Tyndale House Publishers. pp. 79–221.
  • Johnson, Kay Ann (2016). China's Hidden Children: Abandonment, Adoption, and the Human Costs of the One-Child Policy. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0226352510.
  • Scharping, Thomas (2019). "Abolishing the One-Child Policy: Stages, Issues and the Political Process". Journal of Contemporary China. 28 (117): 327–347. doi:10.1080/10670564.2018.1542217. S2CID 158350849.
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The one child policy Simplified Chinese 一孩政策 was a population planning initiative in China implemented between 1979 and 2015 to curb the country s population growth by restricting many families to a single child The program had wide ranging social cultural economic and demographic effects although the contribution of one child restrictions to the broader program has been the subject of controversy 1 Its efficacy in reducing birth rates and defensibility from a human rights perspective have been subjects of controversy 2 A propaganda painting in Guangdong Province promotes the idea of a nuclear family with a single child Birth rate in China 1950 2015China s family planning policies began to be shaped by fears of overpopulation in the 1970s and officials raised the age of marriage and called for fewer and more broadly spaced births 3 A near universal one child limit was imposed in 1980 and written into the country s constitution in 1982 4 5 Numerous exceptions were established over time and by 1984 only about 35 4 of the population was subject to the original restriction of the policy 6 167 In the mid 1980s rural parents were allowed to have a second child if the first was a daughter It also allowed exceptions for some other groups including ethnic minorities under 10 million people 7 In 2015 the government raised the limit to two children and in May 2021 to three 8 In July 2021 it removed all limits 9 shortly after implementing financial incentives to encourage individuals to have additional children 10 Implementation of the policy was handled at the national level primarily by the National Population and Family Planning Commission and at the provincial and local level by specialized commissions 11 Officials used pervasive propaganda campaigns to promote the program and encourage compliance The strictness with which it was enforced varied by period region and social status In some cases women were forced to use contraception receive abortions and undergo sterilization 12 13 Families who violated the policy faced large fines and other penalties 14 The population control program had wide ranging social effects particularly for Chinese women Patriarchal attitudes and a cultural preference for sons led to the abandonment of unwanted infant girls some of whom died and others of whom were adopted abroad 12 15 Over time this skewed the country s sex ratio toward men and created a generation of missing women 15 However the policy also resulted in greater workforce participation by women who would otherwise have been occupied with childrearing and some girls received greater familial investment in their education 16 17 The Chinese Communist Party credits the program with contributing to the country s economic ascendancy and says that it prevented 400 million births although some scholars dispute that estimate 18 Some have also questioned whether the drop in birth rate was caused more by other factors unrelated to the policy 18 In the West the policy has been widely criticized for perceived human rights violations and other negative effects 2 Contents 1 Background 2 Formulation of the policy 2 1 Virtual population crisis 2 2 Chinese population science 2 2 1 Social scientists 2 2 2 Natural scientists 3 History 4 Enforcement 4 1 Financial 4 2 Contraception and sterilization 4 3 Evasion 4 4 Propaganda 4 5 Material incentives 4 6 Relaxation 4 7 Abolition 5 Public responses 5 1 Urban responses 5 2 Rural responses 6 Effects 6 1 Population 6 2 Fertility reduction 6 3 Disparity in sex ratio at birth 6 4 Education 6 5 Adoption and abandonment 6 6 Transnational adoption 6 7 Twins 6 8 Quality of life for women 6 9 Healthcare improvements 6 10 Four two one problem 6 11 Impact on elder care 6 12 Unregistered children 6 13 Potential social problems amp little emperor phenomenon 6 14 Birth tourism 6 15 Sex selective abortion 6 16 Savings rate 7 Criticism 7 1 Statement of the effect of the policy on birth reduction 7 2 Unequal enforcement 7 3 Human rights violations 7 4 Effect on infanticide rates 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksBackground editSee also Family planning policies of China Chinese economic reform and Boluan Fanzheng nbsp China s population since 1950Since the establishment of the People s Republic of China in 1949 socialist construction was the utmost mission the state needed to accomplish Top state leaders believed that having more population would effectively contribute to the national effort During Mao Zedong s leadership in China the birth rate fell from 37 per thousand to 20 per thousand 19 Infant mortality declined from 227 per thousand births in 1949 to 53 per thousand in 1981 and life expectancy dramatically increased from around 35 years in 1948 to 66 years in 1976 19 20 Until the 1960s the government mostly encouraged families to have as many children as possible 21 especially during the Great Leap Forward because of Mao s belief that population growth empowered the country preventing the emergence of family planning programs earlier in China s development 22 23 24 The state tried to incentivize more childbirths during that time with a variety of policies such as the Mother Heroine Chinese 英雄母亲 award a programme inspired by a similar policy in the Soviet Union 24 As a result the population grew from around 540 million in 1949 to 940 million in 1976 25 Beginning in 1970 citizens were encouraged to marry at later ages and many were limited to have only two children 26 Although China s fertility rate plummeted faster than anywhere else in the world during the 1970s under these restrictions the Chinese government thought it was still too high influenced by the global debate over a possible overpopulation crisis suggested by organizations such as the Club of Rome and the Sierra Club The fertility rate dropped from 5 9 in the 1950s and to 4 0 in the 1970s Yet the population still grew at a significant rate There were approximately 541 670 000 people in China in the year 1949 The number then went up to 806 710 000 in 1969 In the early 1970s the state introduced a set of birth planning policies It mainly called for later childbearing Chinese 晚 pinyin wǎn longer time spans between having new children Chinese 稀 pinyin xi and giving birth to fewer children Chinese 少 pinyin shǎo 27 57 Men were encouraged to marry at age 25 or later and women were encouraged to marry at age 23 or later 27 57 The authorities began encouraging one child families in 1978 and in 1979 announced that they intended to advocate for one child families Ma Yinchu a founder of China s population planning theory 28 was also an intellectual architect of the policy 29 30 31 32 33 34 In the late spring of 1979 Chen Yun became the first senior leader to propose the one child policy 35 36 On 1 June 1979 Chen said that 37 38 Comrade Xiannian proposed to me planning better one at most two I d say be stricter stipulating that only one is allowed Prepare to be criticized by others for cutting off the offspring But if we don t do it the future looks grim Deng Xiaoping then paramount leader of China supported the policy along with other senior leaders including Hua Guofeng and Li Xiannian 37 39 On 15 October 1979 Deng met a British delegation led by Felix Greene in Beijing 40 41 saying that we encourage one child per couple We give economic rewards to those who promise to give birth to only one child 37 Formulation of the policy editIn 1980 the central government organized a meeting in Chengdu to discuss the speed and scope of one child restrictions 26 The notable aerospace engineer Song Jian was a participant at the Chengdu meeting He had previously read two influential books about population concerns The Limits to Growth and A Blueprint for Survival while visiting Europe in 1980 Along with several associates Song determined that the ideal population of China was 700 million and that a universal one child policy for all would be required to meet that goal 42 If fertility rates remained constant at 3 births per woman China s population would surpass 3 billion by 2060 and 4 billion by 2080 26 In spite of some criticism inside the party the family planning policy 43 was formally implemented as a temporary measure on 18 September 1980 18 44 45 46 The plan called for families to have one child each in order to curb a then surging population and alleviate social economic and environmental problems in China 47 48 Virtual population crisis edit Despite the legitimate ongoing rapid growth of China s population and the evident effects it brought to society using the term population crisis to describe the situation is disputed Scholars including Susan Greenhalgh argue that the state intentionally created a virtual population crisis in order to serve political ends 49 According to state promotions the looming overpopulation crisis would ruin the national agenda of achieving China s socialist modernization which includes industry agriculture national defense and technology 50 China s attitude towards population control on the global stage in international forums evidenced an ambiguous stance on the nature of the crisis In the mid 1960s when global movements for birth control emerged Chinese delegates expressed their opposition toward population control In the first UN organized World Population Conference held in Bucharest in 1969 they claimed that it was an imperialist agenda that Western countries imposed on Third World countries and that population was not a determining factor of economic growth and a country s well being 51 Yet in the domestic setting the state leaders were already wary of the perceived population crisis that was thought to endanger the modernization of China 51 It is also suggested that mathematical terms graphs and tables were utilized to form a convincing narrative that presents the urgency of the population problem as well as justifies the necessity of mandatory birth control across the nation 52 Due to the previous traumas of the Cultural Revolution public and top state leaders turned to the charisma of science and sometimes blindly worshipped it as the solution to every problem As a result any proposal that was veiled and decorated by the so called scientific back ups would be highly considered by both the people and the state 52 Arguments started to come out in 1979 suggesting that the excessively rapid population growth was sabotaging the economy and destroying the environment and essentially preventing China from being a rightful member of the global world Skillful and deliberate comparisons were made with developed and industrialized countries such as the United States Japan and France 53 Under such a comparison China s relatively low income per capita was attributed directly to population growth and no other factors Though the data is truthful its arrangement and presentation to readers gave a single message determined by the state that the population problem is a national catastrophe and immediate remedy is desperately needed 53 Chinese population science edit China was deprived of data skills and state support to conduct population studies Due to Mao s ambivalent attitude toward the population issue population studies were abolished in the late 1950s After Mao s death family planning became a critical component and premise for reaching China s national goal that is to achieve China s socialist modernization which includes modernizing industry agriculture national defence and technology 50 Therefore at this point population science was closely related and tied with state politics There was a perceived need to redefine population as a domain of science identify the population problem in China and propose a solution to it 54 Such efforts included many groups of people with diverse backgrounds Among these experts two groups held the most influence in defining the population problem and providing a solution to it They were a group of scientists led by Liu Zheng 刘铮 and another group led by Song Jian 宋健 Liu s group mainly came from a social science background while Song s group came from natural science background 55 Social scientists edit Social scientists involved in this discussion in the mid 1970s including Liu Zheng 刘铮 Wu Cangping 邬沧萍 Lin Fude 林富德 and Zha Ruichuan 查瑞传 prioritized the Marxist formulation of the population problem They saw the problem as an imbalance between economic and demographic growth and wished to design a reasonable policy that considered the social consequences 54 These scientists came from the fields of social science statistics genetics history and many others However they had limited access to resources compared to the natural scientists who became involved in population policy making in 1978 55 Since population studies were forbidden from the 1950s until 1979 population science had made no progress between these two decades 54 Natural scientists edit Natural scientists were interested in using control theory and applying it to the actual policy The leader of the group Song Jian 宋健 was a control theorist at the Ministry of Aerospace Industry He was known for his career in missile science Yu Jingyuan 于景元 and Li Guangyuan 李广元 were trained engineers in the field of cybernetics 55 Compared to the social scientists this group of natural scientists had numerous advantages They were politically protected during the Maoist period due to their importance in national defense and technology They also had access to Western science Eventually they took an important role in examining the population model as well as designing the details of one child policies 55 After quantitative research and analysis they showed the top state leaders that the only solution would be a policy to encourage all couples to have only one child regardless of the costs to individuals and society 55 Although Greenhalgh claims that Song Jian was the central architect of the one child policy and that he hijacked the population policy making process 56 that claim has been refuted by several leading scholars including Liang Zhongtang 梁中堂 a leading internal critic of one child restrictions and an eye witness at the discussions in Chengdu 57 In the words of Wang et al the idea of the one child policy came from leaders within the Party not from scientists who offered evidence to support it 58 Central officials had already decided in 1979 to advocate for one child restrictions before knowing of Song s work and upon learning of his work in 1980 already seemed sympathetic to his position 59 History editThe one child policy was originally designed to be a One Generation Policy 60 It was enforced at the provincial level and enforcement varied some provinces had more relaxed restrictions The one child limit was most strictly enforced in densely populated urban areas 61 When this policy was first introduced 6 1 million families that had already given birth to a child were given One Child Honorary Certificates This was a pledge they had to make to ensure they would not have more children 62 Beginning in 1980 the official policy granted local officials the flexibility to make exceptions and allow second children in the case of practical difficulties such as cases in which the father was a disabled serviceman or when both parents were single children 63 and some provinces had other exemptions worked into their policies as well In most areas families were allowed to apply to have a second child if their first born was a daughter 64 65 By 1984 only approximately 35 4 of the population fell within the policy s original restriction 6 167 Furthermore families with children with disabilities have different policies and families whose first child suffers from physical disability mental illness or intellectual disability were allowed to have more children 66 However second children were sometimes subject to birth spacing usually three or four years Children born overseas were not counted under the policy if they did not obtain Chinese citizenship Chinese citizens returning from abroad were allowed to have a second child 67 Sichuan province allowed exemptions for couples of certain backgrounds 68 By one estimate there were at least 22 ways in which parents could qualify for exceptions to the law towards the end of the one child policy s existence 69 As of 2007 only 36 of the population were subjected to a strict one child limit 53 were permitted to have a second child if their first was a daughter 9 6 of Chinese couples were permitted two children regardless of their gender and 1 6 mainly Tibetans had no limit at all 70 nbsp The Danshan Sichuan Province Nongchang Village people Public Affairs Bulletin Board in September 2005 noted that RMB 25 000 in social compensation fees were owed in 2005 Thus far 11 500 RMB had been collected so another 13 500 RMB had to be collected Following the devastating 2008 Sichuan earthquake a new exception to the regulations was announced in Sichuan for parents who had lost children in the earthquake 71 72 Similar exceptions had previously been made for parents of severely disabled or deceased children 73 People have also tried to evade the policy by giving birth to a second child in Hong Kong but at least for Guangdong residents the one child policy was also enforced if the birth took place in Hong Kong or abroad 74 In accordance with China s affirmative action policies towards ethnic minorities all non Han ethnic groups were subject to different laws and were usually allowed to have two children in urban areas and three or four in rural areas 7 Han Chinese living in rural towns were also permitted to have two children 75 Because of couples such as these as well as those who simply paid a fine or social maintenance fee to have more children 76 the overall fertility rate of mainland China was close to 1 4 children per woman as of 2011 update 77 On 6 January 2010 the former National Population and Family Planning Commission issued the national population development 12th five year plan 78 Enforcement editThe one child policy was managed by the National Population and Family Planning Commission under the central government since 1981 The Ministry of Health of the People s Republic of China and the National Population and Family Planning Commission were made defunct and a new single agency the National Health and Family Planning Commission took over national health and family planning policies in 2013 The agency reports to the State Council The policy was enforced at the provincial level through contraception abortion and fines that were imposed based on the income of the family and other factors Population and Family Planning Commissions existed at every level of government to raise awareness and carry out registration and inspection work 79 14 The fine was a so called social maintenance fee the punishment for the families who had more than one child According to the policy families who violated the law created a burden on society Therefore social maintenance fees were to be used for the operation of the government 80 The 2019 documentary One Child Nation portrayed the experiences of enforcement primarily focusing on rural China 81 Enforcement of the one child policy was more uneven in rural China 6 187 Financial edit The Family Planning Policy was enforced through a financial penalty in the form of the social child raising fee sometimes called a family planning fine in the West which was collected as a fraction of either the annual disposable income of city dwellers or of the annual cash income of peasants in the year of the child s birth 82 For instance in Guangdong the fee was between three and six annual incomes for incomes below the district s per capita income plus one to two times the annual income exceeding the average Families were required to pay the fine 83 The one child policy was a tool for China to not only address overpopulation but to also address poverty alleviation and increase social mobility by consolidating the combined inherited wealth of the two previous generations into the investment and success of one child instead of having these resources spread thinly across multiple children 84 This theoretically allowed for a demographic dividend to be realized increasing economic growth and increasing gross national income per capita 85 If the family was not able to pay the social child raising fee then their child would not be able to obtain a hukou a legal registration document that was required in order to marry attend state funded schools or to receive health care Many who were unable to pay the fee never attempted to obtain their hukou for fear that the government would force extra fees upon them Although some provinces had declared that payment of the social child raising fee was not required to obtain a hukou most provinces still required families to pay retroactive fines after registration 86 Contraception and sterilization edit nbsp Propaganda slogan on a building at Yangxin County Hubei China reading an IUD after the first child tubal ligation after the second Since the 1970s the intrauterine device IUD has been of the most widely promoted and practiced forms of contraception It was the primary alternative to sterilization As directed the IUD was medically implanted into women in their child bearing years to prevent pregnancies thus out of order births In the 1980s women either had to receive an IUD after giving birth to their first child or the husband would have to undergo a vasectomy 87 Between 1980 and 2014 324 million Chinese women received IUDs and 108 million were sterilized 13 By law the IUD was placed four months after the delivery of the first child It was only medically removed after permission to conceive is granted by the community based upon various laws and policies on childbirth quotas 88 Despite this some midwives illegally removed the device from their patients 89 This led to IUD inspections ensuring that the IUD remained in place 90 Permanent legal removal of IUDs happens once a woman reaches menopause 91 In 2016 as means of loosening restrictions and abolishing the one child policy the Chinese government now covers the price of IUD removals 92 The most widely used alternative to IUDs has been sterilization As the leading form of contraception in China sterilization has included both tubal ligation and vasectomy 93 Starting in the early 1970s massive sterilization campaigns swept across the country Urban and rural birth planning and family planning services situated themselves in every community 93 Cash payments or other material rewards and fines acted as incentives increasing the number of participants 88 Socially willing participants were considered role models in the community 89 In 1983 mandatory sterilization occurred after the birth of the second or third child 94 As the restrictions tightened a few years later if a woman gave birth to two children legally she had to be sterilized Alternatively in some cases her husband could be sterilized in her place In other cases sterilization of surplus children occurred 95 In the early years of the sterilization campaigns abortion was a method of birth control highly encouraged by family planning 91 With 55 percent of abortion recipients as repeat customers and the procedure easily accessible 91 women had chosen to abort and had been forced to abort because of laws social pressure discovery of secret pregnancy and community birth quotas 88 In 1995 the People s Republic of China PRC warned against abortion as a means of family planning and as a contraceptive Should an abortion be required the woman was to have a safe procedure done by a registered physician 95 Despite this some women even in the 2000s chose or were encouraged to use traditional abortive products such as blister beetles also known as Mylabris 96 Women would ingest the toxins orally or by means of douching with the hopes of inducing abortion An overdose could lead to death of the mother and fetus 96 The efficacy of these products has been very low with a high mortality rate The medical community and PRC have warned against use of these traditional methods 91 The priorities of individual families also played a role in the birth rate Families debated the social and economic stability of the household prior to conception Some families chose to follow the single child limit due to varying social and economic factors such as marrying later spacing out children the cost of raising a child the fines for having multiple children birth control policies and the accessibility of contraceptives 91 In addition those who violated the one child policy could lose their jobs their titles a portion of medical insurance and opportunities for higher education for the second child they could also face sterilization and the labeling of the second child as a black child 88 All of the variables played an important role in couples decisions on when to conceive placing their social and economic situation above the desire to bear additional children Other examples of contraceptives have included the morning after pill birth control pills and condoms The morning after pill has made up 70 percent of oral contraceptives in the Chinese market 87 Only seven percent of Chinese women had shared that they use the pill and condom in combination 92 The Chinese government promoted the use of IUDs and sterilization over the combined pill and condom because PRC authorities questioned the voluntary commitment of the public 90 The Chinese government has distributed free condoms at medical clinics and health centers to adults with proof that they are 18 years of age or older Additionally the rate clarification needed and highly debated sexual education have increased awareness of sex and contraceptive measures among groups of China s young population further lowering the birth rate 87 Evasion edit Some couples paid fines to have a second or third child and others would attempt to circumvent the policy by having non pregnant friends take the mandatory blood tests 97 Propaganda edit The National Family Planning committee developed the slogan Wan Xi Shao later longer and fewer which was first enacted in 1973 and was in effect until 1979 98 This national idea encouraged later marriages and having fewer children However this policy was not effective at enforcing the developing ideal of having fewer children since it was such a new concept that had never been seen in other regions of the world 99 The various problems that arose during its introduction were slowly addressed and it became progressively more targeted to corner women into limited control over their own bodies The Wan Xi Shao slogan emerged during the 1970s as a response to China s rapid population growth which was viewed as a major obstacle to the country s economic and social development 100 This slogan encapsulated three key principles marrying later wan 晚 spacing pregnancies farther apart xi 稀 and having fewer children shao 少 101 and was emblematic of China s national campaign of mandatory birth planning The Chinese government aimed to reduce population growth by promoting guidelines for birth control and family planning The government believed that having fewer children and spacing births more adequately would allow families to allocate more resources per child resulting in better health and education outcomes for children The policy aimed to achieve this by allowing parents more time and resources to invest in each child s health and education as they would have fewer children to care for 102 The later longer fewer campaign was later replaced by the one child policy 100 According to Whyte and colleagues many of the coercive techniques that became notorious after the one child policy was launched actually date from this campaign in the 1970s 101 During the campaign the state bureaucracy was in charge of enforcing birth control and oversaw birth planning workers in every village urban work unit and neighborhood These workers kept detailed records on women of child bearing age including past births contraceptive usage and menstrual cycles often becoming menstrual monitors to detect out of quota pregnancies In some factories there were quotas for reproduction and women who did not receive a birth allotment were not supposed to get pregnant 101 Women who became pregnant without permission were harassed to get an abortion with pressure also put on their husbands and other family members Families were threatened that if they persisted in having an over quota birth the baby would be denied household registration which would mean denial of ration coupons schooling and other essential benefits that depended upon registration In rural areas women who gave birth to a third child were pressured to get sterilized or have IUDs inserted while urban women were trusted to continue using effective contraception until they were no longer fertile 103 Official statistics show that birth control operations including abortions IUD insertions and sterilizations increased sharply during the 1970s in association with the campaign to enforce birth limits These drastic increases in birth control operations suggest that highly coercive birth planning enforcement was already prevalent in both rural and urban areas preceding the launch of the one child policy 104 However during the 1970s the Chinese government was still concerned that the Wan Xi Shao policy would not reduce the growing population sufficiently They felt the population would grow too fast to be supported and a one child policy for all families was introduced in 1979 105 Many of the tactics used by the government were reflected in the day to day life of the average Chinese citizen Since the Chinese government could not outright force its inhabitants to follow strict policy orders the government developed strategies to encourage and promote individuals to take on this responsibility themselves A common technique was placing an emphasis on family bonds and how having one child per family would increase emotional ties in parent offspring relationships as well as extended family giving all their attention to fewer children 106 While the message of population reduction was urgent and required immediate attention it was more important for the government to stop conception and new pregnancies The Family Planning Commission spread propaganda by placing pictures and images on everyday items 107 Aside from signs and posters on billboards advertisements were placed on postage stamps milk cartons food products and many other household items to promote the benefits of having one child Propaganda took many forms throughout the one child policy era and was able to target a wide range of age demographics Children born in this time period spent most of their lives being exposed to the new expectations placed on them by society Educational programs were also encouraged to promote one child policy expectations Many young teenagers were required to read Renkou Jiayu 1981 which emphasized the importance of family planning and birth control measures that would ensure the stability of the nation 108 Younger generations became the main target audience for much of the propaganda as the one child policy continued since they made up a large portion of the population that would contribute to continued growth if no policy was put in place 109 The one child campaign extensively used propaganda posters The aim of the posters was to promote the policy encourage compliance and emphasize the benefits of having fewer children Many of the posters were educational in nature paying attention to reproduction sexuality and conception They were produced by various government departments ranging from ministries of health to local population policy centers 110 To convey the idea that couples should only have one child the one child campaign utilized traditional visual elements from nianhua New Year prints that were popular among the people Traditionally these prints employ visual symbols to convey good wishes for the coming new year In the prints young children often have been portrayed with pink chubby cheeks to symbolize the success of family reproduction and a hopeful future 111 better source needed Even without slogans these pictures were effective in establishing a link between luck and prosperity associated with the New Year and the one child policy Traditional elements like chubby healthy looking babies resonated with people making them believe that compliance with the policy would yield luck good fortune and healthy offspring As the one child campaign progressed the policy was linked to national development and wealth It was considered directly linked to the success of the policy of modernization and reform 112 By promoting the one child policy on a daily basis the government was able to convince the people that it was their duty to fulfill this nationalistic pride Once the idea and initial steps of this policy were introduced into society it was regulated by local policy enforcers until finally becoming an internal obligation the community accepted for the greater good of maintaining a nation In many cases health centers encouraged the idea of reducing the risks of pregnancy by distributing various forms of contraceptives at no cost which made protected sex more common than unprotected sex 108 Material incentives edit Couples who only had one child received healthcare subsidies baojian fei retirement funds and larger grain allowances 6 186 Relaxation edit In 2013 Deputy Director Wang Peian of the National Health and Family Planning Commission said that China s population will not grow substantially in the short term 113 A survey by the commission found that only about half of eligible couples wish to have two children mostly because of the cost of living impact of a second child 114 In November 2013 following the Third Plenum of the 18th Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party CCP China announced the decision to relax the one child policy Under the new policy families could have two children if one parent rather than both parents was an only child 115 116 This mainly applied to urban couples since there were very few rural only children due to long standing exceptions to the policy for rural couples 117 Zhejiang one of the most affluent provinces became the first area to implement this relaxed policy in January 2014 118 and 29 out of the 31 provinces had implemented it by July 2014 119 with the exceptions of Xinjiang and Tibet Under this policy approximately 11 million couples in China were allowed to have a second child however only nearly one million couples applied to have a second child in 2014 120 less than half the expected number of 2 million per year 119 By May 2014 241 000 out of 271 000 applications had been approved Officials of China s National Health and Family Planning Commission claimed that this outcome was expected and that the second child policy would continue progressing with a good start 121 Abolition edit See also Two child policy People s Republic of China In October 2015 the Chinese news agency Xinhua 122 announced the government s plans to abolish the one child policy now allowing all families to have two children citing a communique issued by the CCP to improve the balanced development of population an apparent reference to the country s female to male sex ratio and to deal with an aging population 47 123 The new law took effect on 1 January 2016 after it was passed in the Standing Committee of the National People s Congress on 27 December 2015 124 125 126 The rationale for the abolition was summarized by former Wall Street Journal reporter Mei Fong The reason China is doing this right now is because they have too many men too many old people and too few young people They have this huge crushing demographic crisis as a result of the one child policy And if people don t start having more children they re going to have a vastly diminished workforce to support a huge aging population 127 China s ratio is about five working adults to one retiree the huge retiree community must be supported and that will dampen future growth according to Fong Since the citizens of China are living longer and having fewer children the growth of the population imbalance is expected to continue A United Nations projection forecast that China will lose 67 million working age people by 2030 while simultaneously doubling the number of elderly That could put immense pressure on the economy and government resources 47 The longer term outlook is also pessimistic based on an estimate by the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences revealed by Cai Fang deputy director By 2050 one third of the country will be aged 60 years or older and there will be fewer workers supporting each retired person 128 Although many critics of China s reproductive restrictions approved of the policy s abolition Amnesty International said that the move to the two child policy would not end forced sterilizations forced abortions or government control over birth permits 129 130 Others had also stated that the abolition was not a sign of the relaxation of authoritarian control in China A reporter for CNN said It was not a sign that the party will suddenly start respecting personal freedoms more than it has in the past No this is a case of the party adjusting policy to conditions The new policy raising the limit to two children per couple preserves the state s role 131 132 The abolition having a significant benefit was uncertain as a CBC News analysis indicated Repealing the one child policy may not spur a huge baby boom however in part because fertility rates are believed to be declining even without the policy s enforcement Previous easings of the one child policy have spurred fewer births than expected and many people among China s younger generations see smaller family sizes as ideal 47 133 The CNN reporter added that China s new prosperity was also a factor in the declining 128 birth rate saying Couples naturally decide to have fewer children as they move from the fields into the cities become more educated and when women establish careers outside the home 131 The Chinese government had expected the abolition of the one child rule would lead to an increase in births to about 21 9 million births in 2018 The actual number of births was 15 2 million the lowest birth rate since 1961 134 On 31 May 2021 China s government relaxed restrictions even more allowing women up to three children 135 136 137 138 This change was brought about mainly due to the declining birth rate and population growth Although the Chinese government was trying to spark new growth in the population some experts did not think it would be enough 139 Many called for the government to remove the limit altogether though most women and couples already had adopted the idea that one child is enough and to have more is not in their best interest Because of this new belief the population would be likely to keep declining which could have tragic repercussions for China in the coming decades All restrictions were lifted on 26 July 2021 thus allowing Chinese couples to have any number of children 140 In 2022 the number of births in China hit another record low of 9 56 million births 141 the first time the number had dipped below 10 million since the late 1940s according to China Daily 142 Public responses editIn addition to stories of resistance to the policy and official reasons for support such as strengthening China academic Sarah Mellors Rodriguez describes a surprising number of accounts from her fieldwork in which interviewees fully supported the mandate for personal reasons 6 186 According to Mellors Rodriguez for some couples the policy affirmed their own personal beliefs that having smaller families was wiser and more economical 6 186 187 Urban responses edit China s urban population generally accepted the policy given the already crowded circumstances and shortage of housing in cities 143 175 Incentives offered by the state also were effective to make the urban population compliant with the newly introduced family planning Families that signed the single child pledge and met the requirements of having only one child were given access to housing and daycare while non compliant ones would receive penalties Examples are obstructing the parents careers and delaying the payment of their salaries 144 In her fieldwork interviews Mellors Rodriguez found that middle income urbanites were more receptive to the limitations of the policy because they generally believed that having one child and providing them with all possible opportunities was more important than having additional heirs 6 169 Long term urban residents also reported that supporting multiple children was expensive and burdensome 6 169 Rural responses edit The rural population was more resistant to the policy 6 187 and variations upon the policy were permitted Mothers of a daughter in several rural provinces were allowed to have a single additional child a 1 5 child policy and families in remote areas a second or third child 145 After collective co ops were dismantled and decollectivization took place children became more valued by their parents as a source of agricultural production and as a source of the care required by ageing parents Due to the inherently patrilocal nature of marriage it was expected that daughters would leave their parents and contribute labor to their husbands households The consequent preference for sons came into conflict with the one child policy and government enforcement of this policy 146 Coercive enforcement measures were taken and included abortions of over quota pregnancies and sterilization of women This led to a series of physical conflicts with the government cadres who were assigned to enforce the policy in a specific rural area Rural families wished to add sons to their families in order to contribute to agricultural production 146 But the cadres came on the way in conflict with them Many cadres were middle aged women who went through the collective period when childbearing was encouraged They experienced continuous childbearing and so were strongly supportive of the one child policy When these two distinct groups disapproved of each other conflicts came More than that rural families that were desperate to have a son would abuse women who could not give birth to one They also abandoned infant girls and even engaged in infanticide As a result societal relationships were tense within families and also between the cadres and people 146 Since the 1990s rural policy violations decreased sharply 6 193 Anthropologist Yan Yunxiang attributes this decrease to greater acceptance of family planning among the new generation of parents as well as their increased prioritization of material comforts and individual happiness 6 193 Effects editPopulation edit Below are the results of the first three National Population Census of the People s Republic of China 中华人民共和国全国人口普查 The first two censuses date back to the 1950s and 1960s and the last one in the 1980s They were conducted in 1953 1964 and 1982 respectively 147 Pre policy statistics 1st Census 1953 148 2nd Census 1964 149 3rd Census 1982 150 Total population 601 938 035 723 070 269 1 031 882 511Male population proportion of total 297 553 518 51 82 356 517 011 51 33 519 433 369 51 5 Female population proportion of total 276 652 422 48 18 338 064 748 48 67 488 741 919 48 5 Below are the results of population investigation after the implementation of one child policy Post policy statistics 4th Census 1990 151 2005 Population Sample Survey 2005年全国1 人口抽样调查 152 6th Census 2010 153 Total population 1 160 017 381 1 306 280 000 1 370 536 875Male population proportion of total 584 949 922 51 6 673 090 000 51 53 686 852 572 51 27 Female population proportion of total 548 732 579 48 4 633 190 000 48 47 652 872 280 48 73 Fertility reduction edit nbsp The progression of China s population pyramid International FuturesFurther information Demographics of China and Demographic transition The total fertility rate in China continued its fall from 2 8 births per woman in 1979 already a sharp reduction from more than five births per woman in the early 1970s to 1 5 by the mid 1990s Some scholars claim that this decline is similar to that observed in other places that had no one child restrictions such as Thailand as well as the Indian states of Kerala and Tamil Nadu a claim designed to support the argument that China s fertility might have fallen to such levels anyway without draconian fertility restrictions 58 154 155 156 According to a 2017 study in the Journal of Economic Perspectives the one child policy accelerated the already occurring drop in fertility for a few years but in the longer term economic development played a more fundamental role in leading to and maintaining China s low fertility level 157 However a more recent study found that China s fertility decline to very low levels by the mid 1990s was far more impressive given its lower level of socio economic development at that time 158 even after taking rapid economic development into account China s fertility restrictions likely averted over 500 million births between 1970 and 2015 with the portion caused by one child restrictions possibly totaling 400 million 159 Fertility restrictions also had other unintended consequences such as a deficit of 40 million female babies Most of this deficit was due to sex selective abortion as well as the 1 5 child stopping rule which required rural parents to stop childbearing if their first born was a son 160 Another consequence was the acceleration of the aging of China s population 161 162 Disparity in sex ratio at birth edit nbsp The sex ratio at birth in People s Republic of China males per 100 females 1980 2010 Further information Missing women and Missing women of China The sex ratio of a newborn infant between male and female births in mainland China reached 117 100 and stabilized between 2000 and 2013 about 10 higher than the baseline which ranges between 103 100 and 107 100 It had risen from 108 100 in 1981 at the boundary of the natural baseline to 111 100 in 1990 163 According to a report by the National Population and Family Planning Commission there would be 30 million more men than women in 2020 potentially leading to social instability and courtship motivated emigration 164 The estimate of 30 million cited for the sex disparity however may have been very exaggerated as birth statistics have been skewed by late registrations and unreported births for instance researchers have found that census statistics for women in later stages of life do not match the birth statistics 165 166 The disparity in the gender ratio at birth increased dramatically after the first birth for which the ratios remained steadily within the natural baseline over the 20 year interval between 1980 and 1999 Thus a large majority of couples appeared to accept the outcome of the first pregnancy whether it was a boy or a girl If the first child was a girl and they were able to have a second child then a couple may have taken extraordinary steps to assure that the second child was a boy If a couple already had two or more boys the sex ratio of higher parity births swung decidedly in a feminine direction This demographic evidence indicates that while families highly valued having male offspring a secondary norm of having a girl or having some balance in the sexes of children often came into play Zeng 1993 reported a study based on the 1990 census in which they found sex ratios of just 65 or 70 boys per 100 girls for births in families that already had two or more boys 167 A study by Anderson amp Silver 1995 found a similar pattern among both Han and non Han nationalities in Xinjiang Province a strong preference for girls in high parity births in families that had already borne two or more boys 168 This tendency to favour girls in high parity births to couples who had already borne sons was later also noted by Coale and Banister who suggested as well that once a couple had achieved its goal for the number of males it was also much more likely to engage in stopping behavior i e to stop having more children 169 The long term disparity led to a significant gender imbalance or skewing of the sex ratio As reported by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation in 2015 China had between 32 million and 36 million more males than would be expected naturally and this led to social problems Because of a traditional preference for baby boys over girls the one child policy is often cited as the cause of China s skewed sex ratio Even the government acknowledges the problem and has expressed concern about the tens of millions of young men who won t be able to find brides and may turn to kidnapping women sex trafficking other forms of crime or social unrest 47 The situation was not expected improve in the near future According to the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences there would be 24 million more men than women of marriageable age by 2020 170 As the gender gap became more prominent due to the preference of male children over female offspring policy enforcers shifted their attention to promoting the benefits that came with having daughters In rural isolated regions of China the government provided families with a daughter more access to education and other resources such as job opportunities to parents in order to encourage the idea that having a daughter also has a positive impact on the family 171 In December 2016 researchers at the University of Kansas reported that the sex disparity in China was likely exaggerated due to administrative under reporting and delayed registration of females rather than abortion and infanticide The finding concluded that as many as 10 to 15 million missing women had not been properly registered at birth since 1982 172 173 The study found that the sex ratios of age groups during the one child policy were similar to those born in the period without the single child policy The study also found significant amounts of females appear after the age of ten due to late registration across different age groups 174 The reason for under reporting was attributed to families trying to avoid penalties when girls are born and local government concealing the lack of enforcement from the central government This implied that the sex disparity of the Chinese newborns was likely exaggerated significantly in previous analyses 174 Though the degree of data discrepancy the challenge in relation to the sex ratio imbalance in China is still disputed among scholars 175 176 177 Education edit The one child policy has been a factor in China s rapid increase in higher educational attainment 27 59 Research shows that a stricter fertility policy would induce higher female educational achievement 17 Prior to the one child policy roughly 30 of women attended higher education whereas between 1990 and 1992 50 percent of students in higher education were women The higher participation rate of women in education could be attributed to the lack of male siblings As a result families invested in their single female child 178 Several studies conclude that girls on average received more years of schooling thanks to the one child policy 27 69 Adoption and abandonment edit nbsp A roadside sign in rural Sichuan It is forbidden to discriminate against abuse or abandon baby girls The one child policy prompted the growth of orphanages in the 1980s 179 For parents who had unauthorized births or who wanted a son but had a daughter giving up their child for adoption was a strategy to avoid penalties under one child restrictions Many orphanages witnessed an influx of baby girls as families would abandon them in favor of having a male child 15 Many families also kept their illegal children hidden so that they would not be punished by the government 180 In fact out adoption was not uncommon in China even before birth planning In the 1980s adoptions of daughters accounted for slightly above half of the so called missing girls as out adopted daughters often went unreported in censuses and surveys while adoptive parents were not penalized for violating the birth quota 181 However in 1991 a central decree attempted to close off this loophole by raising penalties and levying them on any household that had an unauthorized child including those which had adopted children 180 This closing of the adoption loophole resulted in the abandonment of some two million Chinese children most of whom were daughters 158 many of these children ended up in orphanages with approximately 120 000 of them being adopted by parents from abroad The peak wave of abandonment occurred in the 1990s with a smaller wave after 2000 180 Around the same time poor care and high mortality rates in some state orphanages generated intense international pressure for reform 182 183 After 2005 the number of international adoptions declined due both to falling birth rates and the related increase in demand for adoptions by Chinese parents themselves In an interview with National Public Radio on 30 October 2015 Adam Pertman president and CEO of the National Center on Adoption and Permanency 184 indicated that the infant girls of yesteryear have not been available if you will for five seven years China has been trying to keep the girls within the country And the consequence is that today rather than those young girls who used to be available primarily girls today it s older children children with special needs children in sibling groups It s very very different 185 Transnational adoption edit In April of 1992 China implemented laws that enabled foreigners to adopt their orphan children with the number of children each orphanage could offer for international adoption being limited by the China Center of Adoption Affairs That same year 206 children were adopted to the United States according to the U S State Department 186 Since then the demand for healthy infant girls increased and transnational adoption increased rapidly In accordance with this high demand China began defining more restrictions on foreign adoption including limitations on applicant s age marital status mental and physical health income family size and education 186 According to the U S State Department there have been over 80 000 international adoptions from China since international adoptions were implemented As the flow of foreigners adopting from China increased so did illicit adoption practices Families in China that did not or could not keep their child would often be subject to abandonment or infanticide Abandoned babies often found themselves in orphanages ready to be adopted This also made it easy for governments to engage in the trafficking of children In the years between 2002 and 2005 officials in Hunan and Guangdong provinces profited from the buying and trafficking of approximately 1 000 abducted babies for international adoption 186 Twins edit Since there were no penalties for multiple births 27 58 it was believed that an increasing number of couples were turning to fertility medicine to induce the conception of twins According to a 2006 China Daily report the number of twins born per year was estimated to have doubled timeframe 187 A 2016 study concluded that the increase in the policy fine of one year s income is associated with an increase in twin births by approximately 0 07 per 1 000 births indicating that at least one third of the increase in twins since the 1970s could be explained by the one child policy 188 Quality of life for women edit The increase in the number of only child girls resulted in gradual changes in social norms regarding gender including a decrease in the inequalities between women and men 189 66 The one child policy s limit on the number of children resulted in new mothers having more resources to start investing money in their own well being As a result of being an only child women had increased opportunities to receive an education and support to get better jobs One side effect of the one child policy was the liberation of women from the significant duties of taking care of many children and the family in the past instead women have had more time for themselves to pursue their career or hobbies The other major side effect of the policy was that the traditional concepts of gender roles between men and women have weakened Being one and the only chance the parents have women have been expected to compete with peer men for better educational resources or career opportunities Especially in cities where the one child policy was much more regulated and enforced expectations for women to succeed in life are no less than for men Recent when data has shown that the proportion of women attending college is higher than that of men The policy also had a positive effect at 10 to 19 years of age on the likelihood of completing senior high school in women of Han ethnicity At the same time the one child policy reduced the economic burden for each family The average conditions for each family improved As a result women also have had much more freedom within the family They have been supported by family to pursue life achievements 190 Mothers who complied with the policy were able to have longer maternity leave periods as long as they were older than 24 191 The government encouraged couples to start family planning at an older age Since many of these women were employed the incentive to have later births was to provide paid leave as long as they followed the expectation of having one child However if they happened to have a second pregnancy they were stripped of their privileges and were not given the same resources compared to their first birth During this time period when another shift in attitude towards women was the harsh punishment they would receive if they acted against the newly established policy In areas such as Shanghai women faced similar punishments as men while before the Revolution they tended to have more lenient penalties 192 Women s experiences of the one child policy shaped their perceptions of it both of which have been studied extensively by researchers These studies have revealed a variety of perspectives While some women viewed the policy as beneficial particularly in terms of providing better educational and employment opportunities for their children others experienced significant negative effects including gender based discrimination psychological distress and social stigma as a byproduct of the policy One study by Greenhalgh et al 2005 found that many urban women in China perceived the one child policy as positive as it allowed them to have greater control over their reproductive health and career trajectories These women also valued the educational and economic opportunities afforded to their single child which were seen as providing a pathway out of poverty and towards upward mobility 16 However the same study also found that women s perceptions of the one child policy were heavily influenced by their social and economic circumstances For example women who were unable to afford the fines associated with violating the policy were more likely to form negative perceptions as were women who faced pressure from their families to have a male child 112 Another study by Poston and Glover 2005 found that women in rural China were more likely to view the policy as negative These women reported experiencing significant pressure to have a male child and those who were unable to do so faced social stigma and discrimination 193 In addition women who violated the policy by having a second child were subject to fines job loss and other penalties which could have significant economic and social consequences 193 A study by Mosher 2012 found that women who underwent forced abortions or sterilizations as a result of the one child policy experienced significant psychological distress including depression anxiety and trauma 194 These women reported feeling violated and traumatized by the forced abortions and sterilizations that occurred as a byproduct of the one child policy Such experiences could have long lasting effects on their mental health and wellbeing 194 Taken together these studies suggest that women s diverse perceptions of the one child policy were based on their individual experiences with it These experiences were heavily dependent on women s social and economic circumstances which led to varied perceptions and attitudes on the policy While some women perceived it as positive particularly in urban areas others experienced significant negative effects including psychological distress and social stigma Healthcare improvements edit The one child policy contributed to China s decrease in maternal and child mortality 189 66 It is reported that the focus of China on population planning has helped to provide better healthcare for women and a reduction in the risks of death and injury associated with pregnancy Women and children were eligible for preferential hospital treatment At family planning offices women received free contraception and prenatal classes that contributed to the policy s success in two respects First the average Chinese household has expended fewer resources both in terms of time and money on children giving many more money to invest Second since Chinese adults would no longer rely on children to care for them in their old age there has been an impetus to save money for the future 195 Four two one problem edit nbsp A government sign in Tangshan Township For a prosperous powerful nation and a happy family please practice family planning As the first generation of legally enforced only children came of age to become parents themselves one adult child was left with having to provide support for his or her two parents and four grandparents 196 197 Called the 4 2 1 Problem this leaves the older generations with increased chances of dependency on retirement funds or charity in order to receive support If not for personal savings pensions or state welfare most senior citizens would be left entirely dependent upon their very small family or neighbors for assistance If for any reason the single child is unable to care for their older adult relatives the oldest generations would face a lack of resources and necessities In response to such an issue by 2007 all provinces in the nation except Henan had adopted a new policy allowing couples to have two children if both parents were only children themselves 198 failed verification 199 Henan followed in 2011 200 Impact on elder care edit China s one child policy had significant implications for many aspects of Chinese society including care for elderly populations In Gender and elder care in China the influence of filial piety and structural constraints authors Zhan and Montgomery suggest that the decline of traditional family support networks began with the establishment of work units in the socialist period 201 These collectives were meant to offer healthcare and housing to their workers With the economic reforms of the 1980s and 1990s many of the work units dissolved leaving many elderly workers without the social support they once had 201 This was exacerbated by the one child policy because many families now only had one child to care for elderly parents leading to increased pressure and responsibility for the sole caregiver 201 According to a study by Gustafson 2014 the one child policy has led to a significant decrease in the availability of family caregivers for the elderly in China 202 So tens of millions of retirees now only have one child to rely on for care This has led to an inverted pyramid in which two sets of elderly parents must rely on a single married couple of two adult children each of whom is an only child with no siblings who in turn have produced a single child on whom the family must eventually rely on in the next generation The one child policy in China has had a significant impact on filial piety and elder care Filial piety is a traditional Confucian value that emphasizes respect obedience and care for one s parents and elders 203 However the one child policy has led to a smaller pool of potential caregivers for elderly parents and has also contributed to a shift in attitudes toward elder care 204 205 One study found that the one child policy has led to a decline in filial piety in China as fewer children are responsible for caring for their elderly parents The study also found that the one child policy has led to a shift in the responsibility for elder care from the family to the state 205 For example Feng argued in 2010 that the Chinese government had increased efforts to build residential elder care services by actively promoting the construction of senior housing homes for the aged and nursing homes 205 This included government sponsored subsidies to spur construction and operation of new facilities 205 The Virtual Elder Care Home clarification needed has gained popularity which features home care agencies providing a wide range of personal care and homemaker services in elders homes 205 Services are initiated by phone calls to a local government sponsored information and service center which then directs a qualified service provider to the elder s home Participating providers contract with the local government and are reimbursed for services purchased by the government on behalf of eligible care recipients 205 While these programs are mainly centered in urban areas current policy directives in rural areas favor institutions by encouraging centralized support and care in rural homes that are run and subsidized by the local government 205 For rural elders who do not have the option to turn to residential facilities many have resorted to signing a family support agreement contract with adult children to ensure needed support and care 205 Furthermore another study found that the one child policy has had a significant impact on the quality of elder care in China with many elderly parents reporting feeling neglected and abandoned by their adult children This is due to a lack of resources and support from the younger generation 206 Unregistered children edit Further information Heihaizi Heihaizi Chinese 黑孩子 pinyin heihaizi or black child is a term denoting children born outside the one child policy or generally children who are not registered in the Chinese national household registration system Being excluded from the family register means they do not possess a hukou which is an identifying document similar in some ways to the American social security card 207 In this respect they do not legally exist and as a result cannot access most public services such as education and health care and do not receive protection under the law 208 209 210 Potential social problems amp little emperor phenomenon edit See also Shidu bereavement In urban areas especially a byproduct of the one child policy has been changing family dynamics Traditionally grandparents had been the focal point of the family in China they were adored by all family members and were the ones who exercised decision making in the day to day life of the family 211 Feng suggests that the implementation of the one child policy and the resulting numbers of one child families have greatly reduced the multigenerational family form and has weakened the central position of elders in the family 211 Feng also suggests that the one child policy has caused parents to spend less leisure time alone and more leisure time with their children Feng writes t he children tend to rely more so on their parents as companions and to participate together in recreational activities He continues t his has promoted an equality in the parent child relationship and has restricted to a certain extent the interactions of children with others 211 In the one child family the core is the parent child relationship and research suggests that the husband wife relationship has been less emphasized and cultivated as a result 212 In China the one child policy has been associated with the term little emperor which describes the perceived effects of parents focusing their attention exclusively on their only child The term gained popularity as a way to suggest that only children may become spoiled brats due to the excess attention they receive from their parents 211 A study by Cameron and colleagues explored this phenomenon finding that the one child policy had behavioral impacts on only children The authors tested Beijing youths born in several birth cohorts just before and just after the launch of the one child policy using economic games designed to detect differences in desirable social behaviors like trust and altruism The study found that only children in China were more likely to exhibit narcissistic and selfish behavior compared to those with siblings 213 The study also found that only children had higher levels of academic achievement but lower levels of social competence and empathy 213 Overall these findings suggest that the one child policy had unintended social and psychological consequences that may have lasting effects on Chinese society as a whole Other scholarship supports that the little emperor phenomenon does exist Jiao and colleagues compared children between the ages of four and ten from urban and suburban areas of Beijing using peer ratings of cooperativeness leadership and other desirable traits When they analyzed a matched sample of only children and children with siblings from similar backgrounds they reported constant patterns in which the only children were rated less positively 214 However researchers Chen and Jin outline some of the arguably positive byproducts of this little emperor phenomenon They suggest that since only children receive more attention and resources from their parents it can lead to improved academic performance and overall success in life 206 With the first generation of children born under the policy which initially became a requirement for most couples with first children born starting in 1979 and extending into the 1980s reaching adulthood such worries were reduced 215 Toni Falbo a professor of educational psychology and sociology at the University of Texas at Austin came to the conclusion that no measurable differences exist in terms of sociability and characterization between singleton children and multi sibling children except that single children scored higher on intelligence and achievement due to a lack of dilution of resources 216 Some 30 delegates called on the government in the Chinese People s Political Consultative Conference in March 2007 to abolish the one child rule citing social problems and personality disorders in young people One statement read It is not healthy for children to play only with their parents and be spoiled by them it is not right to limit the number to two children per family either 217 The proposal was prepared by Ye Tingfang a professor at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences who suggested that the government at least restore the previous rule that allowed couples to have up to two children According to a scholar The one child limit is too extreme It violates nature s law and in the long run this will lead to mother nature s revenge 217 218 Birth tourism edit Reports surfaced of Chinese women giving birth to their second child overseas a practice known as birth tourism Many went to Hong Kong which is exempt from the one child policy Likewise a Hong Kong passport differs from China s mainland passport by providing additional advantages example needed Recently when though the Hong Kong government has drastically reduced the quota of births set for non local women in public hospitals As the United States practices birthright citizenship all children born in the US automatically have US citizenship at birth The closest US location from China is Saipan in the Northern Mariana Islands a US dependency in the western Pacific Ocean that generally allows Chinese citizens to visit for 14 days without requiring a visa As of 2012 the Northern Mariana Islands were experiencing an increase in births by Chinese citizens because birth tourism there had become cheaper than in Hong Kong This option is used by relatively affluent Chinese who may want their children to have the option of living in the US as adults 219 220 Sex selective abortion edit Due to the preference in rural Chinese society to give birth to a son 221 prenatal sex discernment and sex selective abortions are illegal in China 222 It is often argued as one of the key factors in the imbalanced sex ratio in China as excess female infant mortality and under reporting of female births cannot solely explain this gender disparity 223 Researchers found that the gender of the firstborn child in rural parts of China impacted whether or not the mother would seek an ultrasound for the second child 40 of women with a firstborn son sought an ultrasound for their second pregnancy versus 70 of women with firstborn daughters This represented a desire for women to have a son if one had not yet been born 224 In response to this the Chinese government made sex selective abortions illegal in 2005 224 In China male children have always been favored over female children With the one child policy in place many parents often chose abortions to meet the one child standard as well as for the satisfaction of having a male son 225 Male offspring were preferred in rural areas to ensure parents security in their old age since daughters were expected to marry and support their husbands family A common saying in rural areas was Yang er Fang Lao which translates to rear a son for your old age 226 After the initial forced sterilization and abortion campaign in 1983 citizens of urban areas in China disagreed with the standards being placed on them by the government and having complete disregard for basic human rights 227 This led to the Chinese government straying away from the forced sterilization processes in attempts to encourage civilian compliance Savings rate edit The one child policy has been a factor behind China s high urban household savings rate 27 59 Criticism editThis article s criticism or controversy section may compromise the article s neutrality Please help rewrite or integrate negative information to other sections through discussion on the talk page July 2023 The policy was controversial outside China for many reasons including accusations of human rights abuses in the implementation of the policy as well as concerns about negative social consequences 2 Statement of the effect of the policy on birth reduction edit The Chinese government quoting Zhai Zhenwu director of Renmin University s School of Sociology and Population in Beijing estimates that 400 million births were prevented by the one child policy as of 2011 while some demographers challenge that number putting the figure at perhaps half that level according to CNN a Zhai clarified that the 400 million estimate referred not just to the one child policy but includes births prevented by predecessor policies implemented one decade before stating that there are many different numbers out there but it doesn t change the basic fact that the policy prevented a really large number of births 18 This claim is disputed by Wang Feng director of the Brookings Tsinghua Center for Public Policy and Cai Yong from the Carolina Population Center at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill 18 Wang argues that Thailand and China have had almost identical fertility trajectories since the mid 1980s and Thailand does not have a one child policy 18 China s Health Ministry has also disclosed that at least 336 million abortions were performed on account of the policy 228 According to a report by the US embassy scholarship published by Chinese scholars and their presentations at the October 1997 Beijing conference of the International Union for the Scientific Study of Population seemed to suggest that market based incentives or increasing voluntariness is not morally better but that it is in the end more effective 229 In 1988 Zeng Yi and Professor T Paul Schultz of Yale University discussed the effect of the transformation to the market on Chinese fertility arguing that the introduction of the contract responsibility system in agriculture during the early 1980s weakened family planning controls during that period 230 Zeng contended that the big cooking pot system of the People s Communes had insulated people from the costs of having many children By the late 1980s economic costs and incentives created by the contract system were already reducing the number of children farmers wanted A long term experiment in a county in Shanxi in which the family planning law was suspended suggested that families would not have many more children even if the law were abolished 69 A 2003 review of the policy making process behind the adoption of the one child policy shows that less intrusive options including those that emphasized delay and spacing of births were known but not fully considered by China s political leaders 231 Unequal enforcement edit Corrupted government officials and especially wealthy individuals have often been able to violate the policy in spite of fines 232 Filmmaker Zhang Yimou had three children and was subsequently fined 7 48 million yuan 1 2 million 233 For example between 2000 and 2005 as many as 1 968 officials in Hunan province were found to be violating the policy according to the provincial family planning commission also exposed by the commission were 21 national and local lawmakers 24 political advisors 112 entrepreneurs and 6 senior intellectuals 232 Some of the offending officials did not face penalties 232 although the government did respond by raising fines and calling on local officials to expose the celebrities and high income people who violate the family planning policy and have more than one child 232 Also people who lived in the rural areas of China were allowed to have two children without punishment although the family is required to wait a couple of years before having another child 234 Human rights violations edit Further information Human rights in China The one child policy had been challenged for violating a human right to determine the size of one s own proper family According to a 1968 proclamation of the International Conference on Human Rights Parents have a basic human right to determine freely and responsibly the number and the spacing of their children 235 236 According to the UK newspaper The Daily Telegraph a quota of 20 000 abortions and sterilizations was set for Huaiji County Guangdong in one year due to reported disregard of the one child policy According to the article local officials were being pressured into purchasing portable ultrasound devices to identify abortion candidates in remote villages The article also reported that women as far along as 8 5 months pregnant were forced to abort usually by an injection of saline solution 237 A 1993 book by social scientist and anti abortion political activist Steven W Mosher reported that women in their ninth month of pregnancy or already in labour were having their children killed whilst in the birth canal or immediately after birth 238 According to a 2005 news report by Australian Broadcasting Corporation correspondent John Taylor China outlawed the use of physical force to make a woman submit to an abortion or sterilization in 2002 but ineffectively enforced the measure 239 In 2012 Feng Jianmei a villager from Shaanxi province was forced into an abortion by local officials after her family refused to pay the fine for having a second child Chinese authorities later apologized and two officials were fired while five others were sanctioned 240 In the past China promoted eugenics as part of its population planning policies but the government backed away from such policies as evidenced by China s ratification of the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities which compels the nation to significantly reform its genetic testing laws 241 Recent when research has also emphasized the necessity of understanding a myriad of complex social relations that affect the meaning of informed consent in China 242 Furthermore in 2003 China revised its marriage registration regulations and couples no longer have to submit to a premarital physical or genetic examination before being granted a marriage license 243 The United Nations Population Fund s UNFPA support for family planning in China which had been associated in the United States with the one child policy led the U S Congress to pull out of the UNFPA during the Reagan administration 244 and again under George W Bush s presidency citing human rights abuses 245 and stating that the right to found a family was protected under the Preamble in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights 246 Barack Obama resumed U S government financial support for the UNFPA shortly after taking office in 2009 intending to work collaboratively to reduce poverty improve the health of women and children prevent HIV AIDS and provide family planning assistance to women in 154 countries 247 248 Effect on infanticide rates edit Sex selective abortion abandonment and infanticide are illegal in China Nevertheless the US Department of State 249 the Parliament of the United Kingdom 250 and the human rights organization Amnesty International 251 have all declared that infanticide still exists 252 253 A writer for the Georgetown Journal of International Affairs wrote The one child policy has also led to what Amartya Sen first called Missing Women or the 100 million girls missing from the populations of China and other developing countries as a result of female infanticide abandonment and neglect 254 The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation offered the following summary as to the long term effects of sex selective abortion and abandonment of female infants Multiple research studies have also found that sex selective abortion where a woman undergoes an ultrasound to determine the sex of her baby and then aborts it if it s a girl was widespread for years particularly for second or subsequent children Millions of female fetuses have been aborted since the 1970s China outlawed sex selective abortions in 2005 but the law is tough to enforce because of the difficulty of proving why a couple decided to have an abortion The abandonment and killing of baby girls has also been reported though recent research studies say it has become rare in part due to strict criminal prohibitions 47 Anthropologist G William Skinner at the University of California Davis and Chinese researcher Yuan Jianhua have claimed that infanticide was fairly common in China before the 1990s 255 See also edit nbsp China portalPopulation history of China Shidu bereavement Two child policy Three child policy The Dying Rooms Abortion in China Demographics of China Human overpopulation Human population planning List of countries and dependencies by populationNotes edit Some demographers challenge that number putting the figure at perhaps half that level References edit Hvistendahl Mara 18 October 2017 Analysis of China s one child policy sparks uproar ScienceInsider 358 6361 283 284 Bibcode 2017Sci 358 283H doi 10 1126 science 358 6361 283 PMID 29051354 Retrieved 13 April 2022 a b c Hvistendahl Mara 17 September 2010 Has China Outgrown The One Child Policy Science 329 5998 1458 61 Bibcode 2010Sci 329 1458H doi 10 1126 science 329 5998 1458 PMID 20847244 Hershatter Gail 2019 Women and China s Revolutions Rowman et Littlefield p 253 ISBN 9781442215689 Kane P Choi C Y 9 October 1999 China s one child family 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soc 090220 032839 ISSN 0360 0572 S2CID 235521373 Feng Wang Cai Yong Gu Baochang 2013 Population Policy and Politics How Will History Judge China s One Child Policy Population and Development Review 38 115 129 doi 10 1111 j 1728 4457 2013 00555 x ISSN 0098 7921 JSTOR 23655290 Fong Mei 2015 One Child The Past and Future of China s Most Radical Experiment Houghton Mifflin Harcourt ISBN 978 0 544 27539 3 Interview with Mei on her challenges writing the book Hardee Cleaveland Karen 1988 Family Planning in China Recent Trends Volume 3 Center for International Research U S Bureau of the Census Goh Esther C L 2011 China s One Child Policy and Multiple Caregiving raising little suns in Xiamen PDF Journal of International and Global Studies New York Routledge Archived from the original PDF on 24 May 2012 Greenhalgh Susan 2008 Just One Child Science and Policy in Deng s China illustrated ed University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 25339 1 Ling Chai 2011 A Heart for Freedom The Remarkable Journey of a Young Dissident Her Daring Escape and Her Quest to Free China s Daughters Tyndale House Publishers pp 79 221 Johnson Kay Ann 2016 China s Hidden Children Abandonment Adoption and the Human Costs of the One Child Policy University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0226352510 Scharping Thomas 2019 Abolishing the One Child Policy Stages Issues and the Political Process Journal of Contemporary China 28 117 327 347 doi 10 1080 10670564 2018 1542217 S2CID 158350849 link href, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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