Updated
Updated · The Guardian · Jun 11
Chinese Women Resist Birth Pressure as Fertility Falls to Record 5.63 per 1,000
Updated
Updated · The Guardian · Jun 11

Chinese Women Resist Birth Pressure as Fertility Falls to Record 5.63 per 1,000

1 articles · Updated · The Guardian · Jun 11

Summary

  • Nearly 50% of Chinese women aged 18 to 24 now say they do not want children, as more women assert control over pregnancy and childbirth despite official pressure to raise births.
  • That resistance reflects both present-day costs and the legacy of coercive family planning: China’s birth rate fell to a record-low 5.63 per 1,000 last year, while many women say child-rearing is unaffordable.
  • In Shandong’s Shen county, women still recount the 1991 “childless 100 days,” when forced abortions, sterilizations and a 6,500 yuan fine were used to stop births under the one-child policy.
  • Researchers say decades of one-child enforcement reshaped family expectations, with one recent study finding only-child upbringing significantly reduced ideal family size for a generation.
  • The result is a deeper challenge for Beijing: subsidies and tax breaks are colliding with a growing view among women that having children is a personal choice, not a state duty.

Insights

Beijing now offers cash for babies. Can any incentive overcome a generation’s desire for child-free lives after the one-child policy?
As China's population shrinks, can automation and AI solve the economic crisis that new babies are supposed to fix?
China's military is now filled with only-children. Is this demographic time bomb the greatest hidden threat to its global power?

China’s Fertility Rate Crisis: Causes, Policy Failures, and Global Implications in 2025

Overview

China is experiencing a profound demographic transformation, highlighted by India surpassing it as the world’s most populous nation in 2023. This shift has brought unprecedented demographic pressures, as China now faces the challenge of a rapidly aging population while its economy remains in a developmental phase. The high cost of raising children adds to these hurdles, making it difficult for families to grow. As a result, China is confronting significant obstacles to future economic growth and social welfare, marking a critical turning point in its population dynamics by 2025.

...