Advisors say it's time to change one-child policy

(Shanghai Daily)
Updated: 2007-03-15 16:55

Twenty-nine Chinese top political advisors have spoken out against the nation's family planning policy, saying that it may be time to abandon the decade-long one-child policy and restore it to the previous practice to allow people to have two kids.

Though the one-child policy has played a key role in curbing the rising Chinese population since the 1980s, 10 years after China carried out a national family planning project, the negative side of the policy has now emerged after years of practice, said Ye Tingfang, one of the sponsors of the proposal, the Shaanxi-based Huashang Daily reported today.

Therefore the government may need to abolish the policy as soon as possible, the proposal stated.

The proposal was submitted to the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, the top political advisory body, which ended today.

The proposal also suggested that it may be a proper time to introduce the previous policy again to back up a family's right to decide whether to have one or two kids, Ye said, who is also a researcher at the Chinese Academy of Sciences.

One child is too few for a family but two would be enough, Ye said, explaining the guideline of the proposal.

Formulated in the 1970s, China's family planning policy encourages "later in life" marriages and childbearing, and limits most urban couples to one child and most rural couples to two.

Violators of the policy face a fine which amounts to at least four times the local average annual income. For government workers, they will also be punished by the Party and their administration if they have more than one child.

"The one child in a family usually has no siblings to play with during their upbringing and has to center on their parent's attention all the time, which oppresses their human nature and the child's maturity," Ye said.
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