Subsidies, tax rebates, housing credits: How China is encouraging families to have more babies

Subsidies, tax rebates, housing credits: How China is encouraging families to have more babies

Officials warned that China’s population will begin to shrink by 2025. Higher costs of living and a cultural shift as people grow used to smaller families have been cited as reasons behind the lower number of babies

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Subsidies, tax rebates, housing credits: How China is encouraging families to have more babies

Beijing: China on Tuesday announced a slew of perks aimed at encouraging families to have more babies as birth rates hit a record low and officials warned that the population will start to shrink by 2025.

The world’s most populous country has been grappling with a looming demographic crisis as it faces a rapidly ageing workforce, slowing economy and its weakest population growth in decades.

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Although Beijing ended its draconian “one-child rule” in 2016 and last year allowed couples to have three children, birth rates have slipped over the past five years.

The policy guidelines issued by the National Health Commission (NHC) on Tuesday urge both the central and provincial governments to increase spending on reproductive health and improve childcare services nationwide.

They require local governments to “implement active fertility support measures”, including offering subsidies, tax rebates, and better health insurance, as well as education, housing and employment support for young families.

All provinces must also ensure they provide enough nurseries for children aged two to three by the end of the year in a bid to reduce a severe shortage of childcare services.

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Richer Chinese cities have been doling out tax and housing credits, educational benefits and even cash incentives to encourage women to have more children, and the latest guidelines seek to push all provinces to roll out such measures.

China’s birth rate slipped to 7.52 births per 1,000 people last year — the lowest since records began in 1949, when Communist China was founded, according to National Bureau of Statistics data.

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Higher costs of living and a cultural shift as people grow used to smaller families have been cited as reasons behind the lower number of babies.

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