China: Shanghai relaxes one-child policy
Shanghai faces a spate of demographic challenges, including a low birth rate, an aging population and an unbalanced population structure.
Shanghai's legislature on Tuesday passed an amendment to relax the city's birth control policy, becoming the sixth region nationwide to allow couples to have a second child if either parent is an only child.
The amendment, passed at a meeting of the Standing Committee of the Shanghai Municipal People's Congress, will go into effect on March 1, the local legislature said in a statement.
Shanghai now faces a spate of demographic challenges, including a low birth rate, an aging population and an unbalanced population structure, according to the Shanghai Municipal Commission of Health and Family Planning.
Similar reasons were cited when the third plenary session of the 18th Communist Party of China Central Committee decided to ease the restrictions of the decades-old one-child policy last November.
About 75,000-150,000 new-born babies are estimated to be added to the city's population in the next three to five years, said the Shanghai Municipal Commission of Health and Family Planning.
Currently about 370,000 families in Shanghai are eligible to have another child under the revision to the policy.
In addition to Shanghai, the cities of Beijing and Tianjin, along with the provinces of Zhejiang, Jiangxi and Anhui have already made similar revisions easing the restrictions of the one-child policy.