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Opinion | China’s population crisis needs more help than just scrapping fines for having too many children

  • China announced at the end of May families could now have up to three children in response to its shrinking population
  • And officials announced last week that families in China no longer have to worry about being fined or being hit with other consequences for having additional children

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Responding to its 2020 census results, China introduced a three-child policy in May 2021 after Chinese mothers gave birth to just 12 million babies in 2020. Photo: AP

Last week’s decision to abolish China’s 40-year-old policy of imposing hefty fines on so-called surplus births puts the final nail in the coffin of the country’s notorious family planning regime.

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The fines started in the early 1980s and instilled fear throughout society to discourage births. They could immediately bankrupt a family.

In some provinces, the maximum fine was set at 10 years of the local average income for both the father and the mother, or a couple had to pay a one-off cash payment equivalent to 20 years of income.

Award-winning film Chinese director Zhang Yimou paid 7.48 million yuan in 2014 for having three children above his quota.
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In rural China, it was not uncommon for local family planning officials, or the country’s birth police, to take all the property they could from a couple for violating the rules.

The implementation in some places was so harsh that China has created a sizeable group of family planning refugees – those who left their hometowns to avoid forced abortion or financial punishment.

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