Policies aim to help ease burden of child raising

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Yang Wanli
Wednesday 15 December 2021 07:21 EST
Fathers-to-be learn how to take care of babies at Shijiazhuang Obstetrics and Gynecology Hospital in Hebei province in July
Fathers-to-be learn how to take care of babies at Shijiazhuang Obstetrics and Gynecology Hospital in Hebei province in July (LIANG ZIDONG / XINHUA)

More favourable parental leave policies have been rolled out in China recently in an effort to reduce the burden of childbirth and child care. More than 10 cities and provinces have launched detailed measures, such as longer parental leave, to support couples having more children.

In November a revision to the population and family planning regulation was passed in Shanghai. Under the revised regulation, maternity leave will be extended by 30 days to 158 days, and both parents will be entitled to five days of annual paid leave until their child turns three.

Beijing followed suit and approved a revised regulation to extend mothers’ maternity leave from 30 days to 60 days, on top of the 98 days leave stipulated in national regulations. Qinghai and Jiangxi provinces also revised their regulations to help the implementation of the third-child policy.

Along with the maternity leave based on national regulations, the two provinces will give mothers an extended 90 days of maternity leave. Fathers in Qinghai will also be entitled to 15 days of paid leave to take care of their newborns, while fathers in Jiangxi will be entitled to 30 days.

China has been gradually adjusting its one-child family planning policy. The second-child policy was partially introduced in 2013 and the policy has been practised nationwide since 2016. In May, the central government announced a new policy encouraging couples to have a third child.

Statistics from the National Health Commission showed that the number of newborns rose to 17.86 million in 2016, the highest number in the past 20 years, but the number slipped to 12 million last year. According to census figures for last year, China’s total fertility rate, the average number of children a woman will have over her lifetime, dropped to 1.3 children. The figure is below the warning line for fertility rates of 1.5, but an improvement from 1.18 in the sixth census released in 2010.

“The fertility rate has become a problem in many countries, not only China, but also developed countries such as the United States and Japan,” said Yang Hongshan, deputy dean of Renmin University of China’s School of Public Administration and Policy.

Yang said extending maternity leave could not on its own solve the low birth rate problem. He called for additional favourable housing policies and subsidies for child care. “Only with improved social services, such as education, childbirth protection and medical services, can the burden of having more than one child be fundamentally eased,” he said.

China’s 14th Five-Year Plan (2021-25) proposed improvements in the country’s social support system, especially for infant and child-care services.

“Those support measures are necessary to reduce the fertility burden. But extending parental leave might also lead to other problems, such as higher costs to employers and weakened competitiveness among women in the labour market,” said Ren Yuan, from Fudan University’s Population Research Institute. “When the policy is put into practice, we need to have more detailed solutions to prevent it from bringing some negative results to women in the workplace,” Ren added.

Previously published on Chinadaily.com.cn

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