China One Child Policy Flashcards

1
Q

What was China’s population growth in the middle of the twentieth century?

A

55 million every three years.

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2
Q

What was the average number of children born to a Chinese woman in 1963?

A

7.5

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3
Q

What was the birth rate in the early 1970s?

A

31 per thousand people

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4
Q

What was the average family size in the early 1970s?

A

3 per family

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5
Q

Why was the policy needed?

A

Continuing strong population growth would bring about great hardships; extreme poverty, lack of food and drinking water, over cultivation, famine, unemployment, overcrowding in cities, traffic congestion, not enough services to support everyone, air, land, and water pollution.

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6
Q

What age were people allowed to marry as part of the One Child Policy?

A

Women – 20, Men - 22

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7
Q

How did the One Child Policy ensure that couples only had one child

A

Sterilization after the first child or abortion of future pregnancies

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8
Q

What were the incentives for couples to conform to the policy?

A
  • 5-10% salary rise (urban).
  • Bigger land allocation (rural).
  • Extended maternity leave.
  • Paid medical and hospital expenses.
  • Priority access to housing, employment and free schooling for the child.
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9
Q

What were the consequences of not conforming to the policy?

A
  • deprived these benefits
  • made to pay large fines.
  • Family allowances and medical benefits were withdrawn.
  • Those who worked in government jobs would be demoted or discharged.
  • Pressure to abort second pregnancies even included pay cuts for the couple’s fellow workers so they would make life unbearable.
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10
Q

Who were the ‘Granny Police’?

A

Older women of the community who were entrusted with the task of keeping everyone in line. They kept a regular check on couples of childbearing age, even accompanying women on contraception appointments to make sure they attended.

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11
Q

What were the exceptions to the rules?

A
  • Membership of a minority ethnic group (can be allowed two or even more children).
  • Having a first child with a disability that is likely to result in inability to work pregnancy after adopting a child.
  • Risk of ‘losing the family line’ without a second child (the first child being a girl).
  • Rural families with ‘real difficulties’ (all children so far being girls).
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12
Q

What were the successes of the One Child Policy?

A
  • Population growth has slowed down sufficiently for people to have enough food and jobs.
  • China’s birth rate fell from 31 to 19 in 20 years
  • the size of the overall population was estimated to be 230 million less than it would have been without the policy.
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13
Q

What changes were made to the policy in the 1990s and 2000s?

A
  • Young couples who are both only children are allowed two children
  • Attitudes towards daughters has improved
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14
Q

Why is the policy unlikely to be relaxed any more?

A

Because in 2008 China still had 1 million more births than deaths every five weeks and 600 million people-half the population-still live on less than $2 per day.

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