China's One-Child Policy: Was It a Good Idea?
In 1949, after a civil war that had lasted more than 20 years, Mao Zedong and his Communist revolutionaries won control of China. Mao's revolution was based on the communist ideal of a classless society in which workers control the government.
At this time, China was a poor country, having slogged through years of war, disease, and natural disaster. Its population was the largest in the world and growing. How would China feed and clothe all of its people? Against the recommendations of some of his advisers, Chairman Mao called for couples to have even more babies. "Of all things in the world," said Mao, "people are the most precious." More people, Mao thought, would mean more workers, and more workers would mean a stronger China. Birth control was discouraged.
One of Mao's early goals was to catch up economically with richer countries like the United States. To this end, people across the country were forced to abandon farming and help create an industrial China. This movement, called The Great Leap Forward, included a program to build backyard furnaces for making steel. But with too many furnaces replacing farms, China faced food shortages. A devastating famine killed an estimated 30 million people.
In 1949, after a civil war that had lasted more than 20 years, Mao Zedong and his Communist revolutionaries won control of China. Mao's revolution was based on the communist ideal of a classless society in which workers control the government.
At this time, China was a poor country, having slogged through years of war, disease, and natural disaster. Its population was the largest in the world and growing. How would China feed and clothe all of its people? Against the recommendations of some of his advisers, Chairman Mao called for couples to have even more babies. "Of all things in the world," said Mao, "people are the most precious." More people, Mao thought, would mean more workers, and more workers would mean a stronger China. Birth control was discouraged.
One of Mao's early goals was to catch up economically with richer countries like the United States. To this end, people across the country were forced to abandon farming and help create an industrial China. This movement, called The Great Leap Forward, included a program to build backyard furnaces for making steel. But with too many furnaces replacing farms, China faced food shortages. A devastating famine killed an estimated 30 million people.
As a result of this disaster, Mao changed his mind about population and birth control and in the late 1960s introduced the slogan "Late, Long and Few." The idea was for couples to many late, wait a long time before having children, and then, when they did have kids, have only a few. Marching behind this banner, China cut its fertility rate in half between 1970 and 1979. But even then, Communist Party officials feared that China's population, now close to one billion, was growing too fast. Their solution was a government program called the one-child policy.
In general terms, China's one-child policy limits Chinese couples to one child each. How-ever, there are exceptions. First, the one-child limitation only applies to Han Chinese, an ethnicity that makes up about 90 percent of the population. It does not apply to minority ethnic groups, who are permitted two or even three children. Second, the policy has not remained absolutely fixed. The Party has begun to worry that there will soon be more old people than young people in China. This possibility has convinced the Communist Party to allow urban residents who are single children themselves to have two kids. Also, the one-child policy has not been evenly enforced. In some places couples who have broken the one-child policy have had to pay large fines, or been punished with forced sterilization and abortions. In other places, couples covered by the policy have two or even three children without paying any penalties.
In general terms, China's one-child policy limits Chinese couples to one child each. How-ever, there are exceptions. First, the one-child limitation only applies to Han Chinese, an ethnicity that makes up about 90 percent of the population. It does not apply to minority ethnic groups, who are permitted two or even three children. Second, the policy has not remained absolutely fixed. The Party has begun to worry that there will soon be more old people than young people in China. This possibility has convinced the Communist Party to allow urban residents who are single children themselves to have two kids. Also, the one-child policy has not been evenly enforced. In some places couples who have broken the one-child policy have had to pay large fines, or been punished with forced sterilization and abortions. In other places, couples covered by the policy have two or even three children without paying any penalties.
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The one-child policy has its supporters and its opponents. On which side do you stand? Read through the seven sources provided. The documents can not tell the whole story, but they do provide an introduction. Read the documents and answer the question before us — China's one-child policy: Was it a good idea?
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Source 2: Feng Wang and Cal Yong, 'China's One Child Policy at 30," Brookings,
September 24, 2010. |
Even before its inception, the one child policy was questioned for its necessity and its enormous social costs. At the time of the policy's announcement [in 1980], China had already achieved a remarkable fertility reduction, halving the number of children per woman from 5.8 in 1970 to 2.7 in 1979. The one child policy, critics warned, would forcefully alter kin relations for Chinese families, and result in accelerated aging.... To enforce a policy that is so extreme and unpopular for families who relied on children for labor and old age support, physical abuses and violence would be inevitable....
China's one child policy may have hastened a fertility decline that was already well in progress, but it is not the main force accounting for China's low fertility today. The claim by Chinese officials that the one child policy has helped avert 400 million births simply cannot be substantiated by facts. Most of China's fertility decline occurred prior to the one child policy. In countries without a forceful and costly policy as China's, birth rate has declined with similar trajectories and magnitude. |
Comparative Fertility Rates*
*Fertility Rate is the number of children the average women has in a lifetime |
Brazil China South Korea Thailand |
1979
4.2 2.7 2.9 3.6 |
2008
1.9 1.7 1.2 1.8 |
Source 3: Jonathan Watts, "China's one-child policy means benefits for parents — if they follow the rules," The Guardian, October 25, Mit
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Li Tianhao has just given birth to a baby boy blessed with his mother's nose, his father's mouth and an impressive ability to sleep through even the loudest disturbance.
It is a skill the newborn will be fortunate to maintain as he has been born in Henan, the most crowded province in the world's most populous nation .... Yet he will probably grow up alone. Although Henan last year became the first province in China to register its 100 millionth resident—giving it a population bigger than any country in Europe—it also claims some of the greatest successes in taming demographic growth through its family planning policies. This has not happened by accident. Henan is one of the most environmentally stressed areas of China with a quarter of the water and a fifth of the land per capita com-pared to the already low national average. Senior family planners say this justifies rigid restrictions. "The large number of peo-ple has put very big pressure on all resources, especially water," said Liu Shaojie vice direc-tor of the Population Commission in Henan. "Over 30 years of effort, we have put in place a systematic procedure for controlling the population. That has eased the impact on the environment. We are doing glorious work."... This policy was initiated primarily for economic and education reasons, but it is increasingly cited as an environmental blessing. According to Liu, the population controls have kept sulfur dioxide emissions down by 17.6% and [reduced] water pollution by 30.8% Without [the one-child policy], he says, the average person in Henan would have a third less land and a quarter less forest. Note: Sulfur dioxide is released by coal-burning power plants. it is a major cause of asthma and bronchial infection and is a big contributor to China's poor air quality. |
Source 4: Susan Greenhaigh and Edwin A. Winckler, Governing China's Population, 2005.
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Perhaps the biggest beneficiaries of the one-child policy have been urban singleton daughters. Their parents' only treasure, since the 1980s single daughters in China's cities have enjoyed privileged childhoods little different from their male counterparts.... With no brothers to compete for their parents' attention and resources, ... these teens have been socialized to value educational and career success and provided the resources with which to achieve it. [Anthropologist Vanessa] Fong argues that this generation of urban singleton girls has been empowered to challenge some of the ... gender norms that have long dominated Chinese life.... In cities such as Shanghai and Dalian young women today enjoy a marriage market that favors brides and a job market with attractive opportunities earmarked for "feminine" applicants. Indeed, some of the hottest and best paying jobs in today's globalizing social service economy (bilingual secretaries, public rela-tions, fashion models) are open exclusively to young women with good looks and sex appeal.... For these young women, the one-child policy seems to be a real blessing.
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Source 5: Laura Fitzpatrick, "A Brief History of China's One-Child Policy," Time, July 27, 2009.
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The one-child policy relies on a mix of sticks and carrots [punishments and rewards]. Depending on where they live, couples can be fined thousands of dollars for having an [extra] child without a permit, and reports of forced abortions or sterilization are common.... The law also offers longer maternity leave and other benefits to couples that delay childbearing. Those who volunteer to have only one child are award-ed a "Certificate of Honor for Single-Child Parents" Since 1979, the law has prevented some 250 million births, saving China from a population explosion the nation would have difficulty accommodating.
But critics of the policy note its negative social consequences, particularly sex discrimination. With boys being viewed as culturally preferable, the practice of female infanticide—which had been common before 1949 but was largely eradicated by the 1950s—was resumed in some areas shortly after the one-child policy went into effect. The resulting gender imbalance widened after 1986, when ultrasound tests and abortions became easier to come by. China banned prenatal sex screening in 1994. Nonetheless, an April [2009] study published in the British Medical Journal found China still has 32 million more boys than girls under the age of 20. The total number of young people is a problem as well; factories have reported youth-labor shortages in recent years, a problem that will only get worse. In 2007 there were six adults of working age for every retiree, but by 2040 that ratio is expected to drop to 2 to 1. Analysts fear that with too few children to care for them, China's elderly people will suffer neglect. Note: Ultrasound Is a technology that enables doctors and parents to see a picture of the fetus when it Is In the mother's womb. The fetus's gender can be detected through ultrasound. infanticide is the purposeful killing of infants. |
Source 6: Jaime FlorCruz, "China copes with promise and perils of one-child policy," CNN, October 29, 2011.
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Mao Xuan
The high cost of the one-child policy is felt deeply by Beijing resident Xiao Xuan, an only-child daughter of a college professor and shopping mall manager. Xiao, 22, says she was blessed with all the attention and resources showered at her from childhood. Still, she says, she had a mostly lonely child-hood. "I used to cut myself on my wrist after being yelled at by my mom and dad because I didn't know who I should talk to or turn to," she says. "I was like that for almost two years, but I am very tough so I made it through." "I hate to say it but the one-child policy should partly be blamed for some social issues of youth today;' she adds. "It's been a ridiculous government interference on family issues." She wished she had a brother or a sister to share all the attention. |
Source 7: Louisa Urn, "China's 'Little Emperors' Lucky, Yet Lonely In Ufe," NPR, November, 2010.
Note: An Internet survey of 7,000 Chinese only children between the ages of 15 and 25 found that 58 percent admitted to being lonely. A majority also described themselves as being selfish. However, many enjoyed being the "sun" around which the family revolved. (Source: NPR, November, 2010) |
A. J. Song
A. J. Song, 23, is the only child in his family, which is from a small village in Guizhou province. . . . He says he probably would not be living in Beijing if he had to share his parents' attention and resources. "I really appreciate [being the] one child, especially from the countryside.... My parents, they give me everything. I'm the center of attention in the family. My mother has seven brothers and sisters; my father has six brothers and sisters. Most of my parents' brothers and sisters have two kids. They are all very jealous about me being the only child," he says. "If I had a sibling, I probably wouldn't be who I am now. Probably I'd still be in my small village, getting married and having kids. If you have more kids in your family, probably they're lacking in education, lacking food, lacking any kind of support, no matter emotional or financial. Basically, everybody is going to be aver-age," he says. . Chinese research finds advantages to being an only child: They tend to score higher on intelligence tests and are better at making friends. |