Volume 37 - Article 30 | Pages 929–956  

Too early or too late: What have we learned from the 30-year two-child policy experiment in Yicheng, China?

By Yu Qin, Fei Wang

Abstract

Background: In January 2016, China ended its 35-year-old one-child policy and replaced it with a nationwide two-child policy. However, it remains unclear whether a two-child policy can effectively increase the fertility level in China.

Objective: We reviewed the 30-year (1985–2015) two-child policy experiment carried out in Yicheng, a county in the Shanxi province of China, to assess the impact of this policy on the crude birth rate, as compared with the one-child policy implemented in most other places in Shanxi.

Methods: We adopted a synthetic control approach. Using this method, we constructed a synthetic county using counties in Shanxi that were subject to the one-child policy. The synthetic county had similar observed characteristics to Yicheng before the launch of Yicheng’s two-child policy experiment in 1985. Therefore, birth rate differences between Yicheng and the synthetic county after 1985 could be attributed only to the two-child policy.

Results: We did not find any short-term impacts of the two-child policy on the Yicheng birth rate prior to the 1990s. We estimated that the two-child policy, in the long run, would lead to a maximum of two more births per 1,000 people every year in Yicheng, compared with similar areas that had a one-child policy.

Conclusions: The two-child policy was not found to boost the birth rate in Yicheng and similar places.

Contribution: The study identified the causal effect of a two-child policy, and was more methodologically reliable than related studies that primarily explored statistical correlations.

Author's Affiliation

Most recent similar articles in Demographic Research

Fertility quantum and tempo with cubic age-specific birth rates
Volume 51 - Article 42    | Keywords: birth rate, cyclically stationary models, fertility curve, fertility quantum and tempo, period/cohort relationships, population momentum

Between money and intimacy: Brideprice, marriage, and women’s position in contemporary China
Volume 50 - Article 46    | Keywords: brideprice, China, divorce, family, family law, gender inequalities, marriage

Moving towards gender equality in China: The influence of migration experiences on rural migrants’ gender role attitudes
Volume 49 - Article 14    | Keywords: China, culture, gender attitudes, gender roles, rural-urban migration

The role of premarital cohabitation in the timing of first birth in China
Volume 45 - Article 8    | Keywords: childbearing, childlessness, China, cohabitation, demographic transition, fertility, timing

A potential new pattern of pathway to adulthood is emerging in China
Volume 44 - Article 42    | Keywords: China, life course, sequence analysis, state policies, transition to adulthood