www射-国产免费一级-欧美福利-亚洲成人福利-成人一区在线观看-亚州成人

US EUROPE AFRICA ASIA 中文
China / Society

Second child is a growing option

By Shan Juan (China Daily) Updated: 2012-07-24 02:42

Increasing number of eligible parents want another baby

Beijing mother Han Xue had a second child last year, 10 years after her first. But despite eligibility the process was far from easy and entailed a bureaucratic paper chase.

Han, 31, felt that two children would keep each other company and provide better support to her and her husband in old age.

"As soon as my first child turned 4, we filed an application for a permit to have a second child to the government office that oversees the street where I was born," Han said.

Han and her husband were both single children and allowed, under the family planning policies introduced in the 1970s, to have a second child.

An increasing number of parents in this category are opting to do so.

Nanjing offers a prime example. Applications filed in the capital of Jiangsu province surged to 600 last year from 85 in 2007, family planning authorities said.

Meanwhile, the number of urban couples eligible to have two children has also increased as the single-child generation comes of marriageable age.

About 10,000 couples are eligible in Nanjing annually, and authorities estimate that by 2015 up to 17 percent of couples in the city will be entitled to have two children.

Already, about 15 percent of women in Nanjing who booked maternity beds for the second half of 2012 were expecting their second baby.

Since 1985, couples in the province are allowed a second child if both parents were single children.

In the province of Jiangxi, the story is much the same

In Jiujiang, one of the province's major cities, the family planning department in Xunyang district received 15 second-baby applications from March to June.

All were from couples who were themselves single children and they accounted for 31 percent of applications during this period.

"More and more couples in the category wanted a second child over the past 3 years in the district," Yu Liye, an official with the department, said.

However, couples, including Han, complained that the application process was complicated and bureaucratic.

"I don't understand why they required our parents' marriage certificate," she said.

Han's husband is from Guangdong province and does not have a Beijing hukou— residence permit — so their application took two months before approval was granted.

Documents required included residential permits, marriage certificate, ID cards, their daughter's birth certificate and a certificate to prove that the birth was permitted and the marriage certificates of both her parents and her parents-in-law.

However, compared with Wang Mei's experience, Han said she felt fortunate.

When Wang, 32, discovered that she was unexpectedly pregnant last fall, both she and her husband were excited and believed that the baby was a gift from God.

Both were single children. But getting approval tuned out to be far from simple.

"I don't have a Beijing hukou, so I had to travel for hundreds of kilometers to my hometown to get dozens of stamps on the required forms. These forms proved that I had only been married once and had only one child," Wang told Beijing Evening News.

"My parents were even asked to apply for a new version of their marriage certificate as my father's name on the original certificate is different from the name on his hukou," she recalled.

Getting all the papers in order, though, was not enough.

"The family planning department asked 10 neighbors to discuss whether I could have another baby. And their opinions were posted up in my community," she said.

When she finally got the birth permit, it was seven months after she conceived. "Our joy was dampened by the bureaucratic procedures," she said.

Yu Liye in Jiujiang confirmed the procedures and agreed that "tolerance is needed".

"It takes time to go through the procedures required to get a permit so those who want a second child should initiate the process early, say, after giving birth to the first child," he noted.

So far, all 31 Chinese provinces, autonomous regions and municipalities on the mainland have fine-tuned their policies, allowing couples who were single children to have another child. The last province to do so, last year, was the most populous, Henan.

It is important to submit applications first otherwise the couple will pay social maintenance fees despite their eligibility.

Fees vary from region to region. In Jiangsu province, they are 40 percent of the annual per capita disposable income of urban residents, which stood at 10,536 yuan ($1,653) last year.

Yuan Xin, a professor at Nankai University's population and development institute in Tianjin said that family planning policy should be adjusted according to changing practical situations.

"Finally, Chinese couples should decide on their own how many children they want," he said.

He also ruled out any possibility that the population would explode as it was proven trend that people, particularly in cities, tended to have smaller families even without imposed limits.

A survey in August last year by the Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences and the Women's Federation of Shanghai found that 45 percent of Shanghai families have decided not to have a second child due to high costs.

Wang Qingyun contributed to this story.

shanjuan@chinadaily.com.cn

Highlights
Hot Topics
...
主站蜘蛛池模板: 亚洲一区二区中文字幕 | 久久91精品国产91久久户 | 成人国产午夜在线视频 | 日韩不卡一二三区 | 一级风流片a级国产 | 成年人黄色网址 | 国内自产拍自a免费毛片 | 毛片视频免费观看 | 一级成人a毛片免费播放 | 在线播放波多野结衣 | 成人欧美视频在线观看播放 | 性做久久久久免费看 | 午夜影院免费体验 | 国产成人亚洲综合网站不卡 | 欧美日韩高清性色生活片 | 日韩精品久久久久久 | 色综合91久久精品中文字幕 | 日韩一区二区天海翼 | 亚洲欧美一区二区三区孕妇 | 在线免费观看成年人视频 | 男人操美女 | 久久综合久久久 | 一级片在线播放 | 国产伦精品一区三区视频 | 色婷婷国产精品欧美毛片 | 亚洲人成综合网站在线 | 国产a级高清版毛片 | 欧美手机看片 | 精品久久久日韩精品成人 | 成人精品视频网站 | 久久成人国产精品免费 | 日本免费网址 | 欧美日韩国产58香蕉在线视频 | 在线国产一区二区 | 最新主播福利视频在线观看 | 日韩三级影院 | 国产成人黄网址在线视频 | 欧美一级特黄做 | 91在线免费公开视频 | 国产美女高清一级a毛片 | 久草免费新视频 |