A Chinese woman plays with her grandchild at the Ritan Park in Beijing.(Photo: Andy Wong, AP)
BEIJING -- A Chinese government think tank is urging the
country's leaders to start phasing out its one-child policy immediately
and allow two children for every family by 2015, a daring proposal to do
away with the unpopular policy.
Some demographers see the
timeline put forward by the China Development Research Foundation as a
bold move by the body close to the central leadership. Others warn that
the gradual approach, if implemented, would still be insufficient to
help correct the problems that China's strict birth limits have created.
Xie
Meng, a press affairs official with the foundation, said the final
version of the report will be released "in a week or two." But Chinese
state media have been given advance copies. The official Xinhua News
Agency said the foundation recommends a two-child policy in some
provinces from this year and a nationwide two-child policy by 2015. It
proposes all birth limits be dropped by 2020, Xinhua reported.
"China
has paid a huge political and social cost for the policy, as it has
resulted in social conflict, high administrative costs and led
indirectly to a long-term gender imbalance at birth," Xinhua said,
citing the report.
But it remains unclear whether Chinese leaders
are ready to take up the recommendations. China's National Population
and Family Planning Commission had no immediate comment on the report
Wednesday.
Known to many as the one-child policy, China's actual
rules are more complicated. The government limits most urban couples to
one child, and allows two children for rural families if their
first-born is a girl. There are numerous other exceptions as well,
including looser rules for minority families and a two-child limit for
parents who are themselves both singletons.
Cai Yong, an assistant
professor of sociology at the University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill, said the report holds extra weight because the think tank is under
the State Council, China's Cabinet. He said he found it remarkable that
state-backed demographers were willing to publicly propose such a
detailed schedule and plan on how to get rid of China's birth limits.
"That
tells us at least that policy change is inevitable, it's coming," said
Cai, who was not involved in the drafting of the report but knows many
of the experts who were. Cai is currently a visiting scholar at Fudan
University in Shanghai. "It's coming, but we cannot predict when exactly
it will come."
Adding to the uncertainty is a once-in-a-decade
leadership transition that kicks off Nov. 8 that will see a new slate of
top leaders installed by next spring. Cai said the transition could
keep population reform on the back burner or changes might be rushed
through to help burnish the reputations of President Hu Jintao and
Premier Wen Jiabao on their way out.
There has been growing
speculation among Chinese media, experts and ordinary people about
whether the government will soon relax the one-child policy - introduced
in 1980 as a temporary measure to curb surging population growth - and
allow more people to have two children.
Though the government
credits the policy with preventing hundreds of millions of births and
helping lift countless families out of poverty, it is reviled by many
ordinary people. The strict limits have led to forced abortions and
sterilizations, even though such measures are illegal. Couples who flout
the rules face hefty fines, seizure of their property and loss of their
jobs.
Many demographers argue that the policy has worsened the
country's aging crisis by limiting the size of the young labor pool that
must support the large baby boom generation as it retires. They say it
has contributed to the imbalanced sex ratio by encouraging families to
abort baby girls, preferring to try for a male heir.
The
government recognizes those problems and has tried to address them by
boosting social services for the elderly. It has also banned
sex-selective abortion and rewarded rural families whose only child is a
girl.
Many today also see the birth limits as outdated, a relic of the era when housing, jobs and food were provided by the state.
"It
has been thirty years since our planned economy was liberalized,"
commented Wang Yi, the owner of a shop that sells textiles online, under
a news report on the foundation's proposal. "So why do we still have to
plan our population?"
Though open debate about the policy has
flourished in state media and on the Internet, leaders have so far
expressed a desire to maintain the status quo. President Hu said last
year that China would keep its strict family planning policy to keep the
birth rate low and other officials have said that no changes are
expected until at least 2015.
Wang Feng, director of the
Brookings-Tsinghua Center for Public Policy and an expert on China's
demographics, contributed research material to the foundation's report
but has yet to see the full text. He said he welcomed the gist of the
document that he's seen in state media.
It says the government "should return the rights of reproduction to the people," he said. "That's very bold."
Gu
Baochang, a professor of demography at Beijing's Renmin University and a
vocal advocate of reform, said the proposed timeline wasn't aggressive
enough.
"They should have reformed this policy ages ago," he said. "It just keeps getting held up, delayed."
Associated Press