Beijing:Birth rates in 10 of China's provincial-level regions fell below one per cent in 2020, accentuating the world's most populous country's dilemma in addressing the deepening demographic crisis, despite supportive policies to motivate couples to have three children under the new policy.
China passed the three-child policy in August last year in a major policy shift to address the deepening demographic crisis attributed to the draconian decades-old one-child policy which policymakers blame for the demographic crisis in the country. China permitted all couples to have two children in 2016, scrapping the one-child policy and revised it to permit three children after the once-in-a-decade census showed that China's population grew at the slowest pace to 1.412 billion.
The new census figures revealed that the demographic crisis China faced was expected to deepen as the population above 60 years grew to 264 million, up by 18.7 per cent in 2020. After the endorsement of the three-child policy, more than 20 provincial-level regions of China have completed modifications and rolled out supportive measures like increased leave for couples, parental leave, extended maternity leave, marriage leave and paternity leave.
According to the statistical yearbook, birth rates in 10 of China's provincial-level regions fell below one per cent in 2020 with Henan, one of the most populous provinces, falling below one million births for the first time since 1978. China's birth rate in 2020 was recorded as 8.52 per 1,000 people, the lowest in 43 years, according to the China Statistical Yearbook 2021, state-run Global Times reported. The natural growth rate of the population accounted for 1.45 per 1,000 people, also a new low since 1978.