

“If you have too many kids then it becomes difficult,” said Lu Xiuyan, a 42-year-old restaurant manager in Jiashan, a dusty village of low-slung buildings a few hours north-east of Beijing, who has one son.
“But if you have fewer kids, you have less of a burden and you’ll be a little better off.”
The national one-child policy was imposed more than 30 years ago, with enforcers relying on permits, fines and sometimes late-term abortions. Opponents say it has led to widespread rights abuses and major demographic imbalances.
Self-imposed birth limits in places such as Chengde district, which includes Jiashan, show the policy is not even required for population control, they say.
China’s family planning commission, whose hundreds of thousands of personnel ensure the rules are followed, was merged with the health ministry at the country’s annual parliament meeting earlier this month.