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Two Sessions 2019
ChinaPolitics

What Chinese women really want when it comes to children and reproductive rights

  • China has abandoned its one-child policy but the worries are not over for unmarried women and parents struggling to afford childcare

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Meng Fanyu and her family are expecting a second child this year but are worried whether they will be able to afford the added costs. Photo: Handout
Mimi LauandEcho Xie

As China prepares to mark International Women’s Day on Friday, Meng Fanyu in Handan, in the northern province of Hebei, wonders if she should celebrate or spend her time planning the family’s budget as they wait for the arrival of a second child.

The 31-year-old cashier went through half a dozen pregnancy test kits last week to confirm that she was indeed pregnant with a second child.

The pregnancy is a welcome surprise but Meng worries about whether her family will be able to raise a second child with a monthly household income of 7,000 yuan (US$1,042) and whether she will have to quit her job at a delivery company to look after the children at home.

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Childcare services in China are expensive, costing up to 5,000 yuan a month in major cities.

But there could be some relief for people like Meng with Premier Li Keqiang’s announcement at the start of the National People’s Congress this week that the government is willing to spend more on infant and childcare services partly to help boost domestic consumption.

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The one-child policy has been scrapped but birth rates are falling. Photo: Imaginechina
The one-child policy has been scrapped but birth rates are falling. Photo: Imaginechina
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