China launches wedding and childbirth subsidies as it fights a steep population decline rooted in decades of one-child policy.
Angela Roma on PexelsFor decades, China enforced one of the most controversial population control measures in modern history.
Guest Contributors Tahina Montoya is a defense and policy researcher at RAND, and Kelly Atkinson is a political scientist at RAND.
China will impose a 13% tax on condoms and other contraceptives starting next year, ending a three-decade tax-exemption ...
The extra cost quickly sparked debate on Chinese microblogging site Weibo. Read more at straitstimes.com. Read more at straitstimes.com.
Beijing has rolled out a series of pro-natalist policies, from offering cash handouts to improving childcare services, extending paternity and maternity leave.
China’s decision to reintroduce a 13 per cent VAT on condoms and other contraceptives comes as the country battles a steep ...
In Daughters of the Bamboo Grove, the journalist profiles twins separated as toddlers by China’s one-child policy and examines America’s demand for international adoptees. How brutally was China’s one ...
Colin Mason, Media Director for the Population Research Institute (PRI), reacted to a recent Financial Post article which called for a world-wide adoption of China's one-child policy by saying that ...
China will loosen its policy limiting most families to one child, a system to slow population growth that has been in place for three decades. The country’s official Xinhua News Agency said Friday ...
China's rollout of measures to boost its flagging birth rate remains patchy and inconsistent, a team of researchers has found ...