China to allow couples to have three children
ITV News Correspondent Sejal Karia explores why China has shifted its policy
China’s ruling Communist Party will ease birth limits to allow all couples to have three children instead of two in response to the population’s rising age, a state news agency said.
The announcement follows census data that showed the country's working age population shrank over the past decade while the number of people older than 65 rose, adding to strain on the economy and society.
The ruling party has enforced birth limits since 1980 to restrain population growth, but there are concerns the number of working age people is falling too fast.
A meeting of the ruling party’s Politburo decided “China will introduce major policies and measures to actively deal with the ageing population”, the Xinhua News Agency said.
Party leaders “pointed out that further optimising the fertility policy, implementing the policy of one couple can have three children and supporting measures are conducive to improving China’s population structure”, the report said.
Restrictions that limited most couples to one child were eased in 2015 to allow all to have two.
But after a brief rise the following year, the number of births has declined.