China revs up fiscal support to boost births


HONG KONG, Jan 16 (Reuters) – China’s population policy is emerging as a key part of its economic strategy as Beijing rolls out its most wide-ranging push to boost a flagging birth rate, with official population data due on January 19 set to show a fourth consecutive annual drop.

Beijing is looking at a total potential cost of around 180 ​billion yuan ($25.8 billion) in 2026 to boost births, according to Reuters estimates, as authorities grapple to undo decades of strict population control that helped tackle poverty but reshaped Chinese families.

The estimate ‌includes the cost of the national child subsidy, which was introduced for the first time last year, as well as expected insurance payments. The government pledged that women in 2026 would have “no out-of-pocket expenses” during their pregnancy, with all medical costs, including in ‌vitro fertilisation (IVF), fully reimbursable under its national medical insurance fund.

China’s finance ministry did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment on the figure, which was in line with economists’ estimates.

China’s population has been shrinking since 2022 and is ageing rapidly, complicating Beijing’s plan to boost domestic consumption and rein in debt, with hundreds of millions of people set to leave the workforce at a time when pension budgets are already stretched.

Demographers and economists argue that fewer children today could mean fewer households and slower consumption growth over time.

POLICIES LIKELY TO HAVE LIMITED EFFECT

Despite the increased spending, demographers said the new measures were unlikely to produce a major rebound in births.

The ⁠initiatives “may have some effect, but their impact is likely to be limited. ‌Low fertility is a widespread challenge across East Asia,” said Xiujian Peng, senior research fellow at the Centre of Policy Studies at Victoria University in Australia.

China has one of the lowest fertility rates in the world at around 1 birth per woman, well below the 2.1 rate needed for a population to remain stable, ‍and is likely to decline further, demographers say. Other East Asian economies including Taiwan, South Korea and Singapore have similarly low levels of fertility at around 1.1 births per woman.

The number of Chinese women of reproductive age, defined by the United Nations as those aged 15 to 49, is set to drop by more than two thirds to under 100 million by the end of the century, according to population projections from the UN.

Peng said Japan, South Korea and ​Singapore had also invested heavily in pro-natalist policies but had limited success. “This experience suggests there is no quick or simple fix.”



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