Australia Australia currently offers fortnightly Family Tax Benefit payments, a Child Care Subsidy based on income and other circumstances, and free immunizations.
China One-child era (1979–2015) The most significant population planning system in the world was China's
one-child policy, in which, with various exceptions, having more than one child was discouraged. Unauthorized births were punished by fines, although there were also allegations of illegal forced
abortions and
forced sterilization. As part of China's planned birth policy, (work) unit supervisors monitored the fertility of married women and may decide whose turn it is to have a baby. The Chinese government introduced the policy in 1978 to alleviate the social and
environmental problems of China. According to government officials, the policy has helped prevent 400 million births. The success of the policy has been questioned, and reduction in fertility has also been attributed to the modernization of China. The policy is controversial both within and outside of China because of its manner of implementation and because of concerns about negative economic and social consequences e.g.
female infanticide. In Asian cultures, the oldest male child has responsibility of caring for the parents in their old age. Therefore, it is common for Asian families to invest most heavily in the oldest male child, such as providing college, steering them into the most lucrative careers, and so on. To these families, having an oldest male child is paramount, so in a one-child policy, daughters have no economic benefit, so daughters, especially as a first child, are often targeted for abortion or infanticide. China introduced several government reforms to increase retirement payments to coincide with the one-child policy. During that time, couples could request permission to have more than one child. According to
Tibetologist Melvyn Goldstein, natalist feelings run high in China's
Tibet Autonomous Region, among both ordinary people and government officials. Seeing
population control "as a matter of power and ethnic survival" rather than in terms of ecological
sustainability, Tibetans successfully argued for an exemption of
Tibetan people from the usual
family planning policies in China such as the
one-child policy.
Two-child era (2016–2021) In November 2014, the Chinese government allowed its people to conceive a second child under the supervision of government regulation. On 29 October 2015, the ruling Chinese Communist Party announced that all one-child policies would be scrapped, allowing all couples to have two children. The change was needed to allow a better balance of male and female children, and to grow the young population to ease the problem of paying for the aging population. The law enacting the
two-child policy took effect on 1 January 2016, and replaced the previous one-child policy.
Three-child era (2021–) In May 2021, the Chinese government allowed its people to conceive a third child, in a move accompanied by "supportive measures" it regarded "conducive" to improving its "population structure, fulfilling the country's strategy of actively coping with an ageing population and maintaining the advantage, endowment of human resources" after declining birth rates recorded in the
2020 Chinese census.
Hungary During the
Second Orbán Government, Hungary increased its family benefits spending from one of the lowest rates in the
OECD to one of the highest. In 2015, it amounted to nearly 4% of GDP.
India Only those with two or fewer children are eligible for election to a local government.
Us two, our two ("Hum do, hamare do" in Hindi) is a slogan meaning
one family, two children and is intended to reinforce the message of family planning thereby aiding population planning. Facilities offered by government to its employees are limited to two children. The government offers incentives for families accepted for sterilization. Moreover, India was the first country to take measures for family planning back in 1952. In 2019, the
Population Control Bill, 2019 bill was introduced in the
Rajya Sabha in July 2019 by
Rakesh Sinha. The purpose of the bill is to control the population growth of India.
Iran After the
Iran–Iraq War,
Iran encouraged married couples to produce as many children as possible to replace population lost to the war. Iran succeeded in sharply reducing its birth rate from the late 1980s to 2010. Mandatory contraceptive courses are required for both males and females before a marriage license can be obtained, and the government emphasized the benefits of smaller families and the use of contraception. This changed in 2012, when a major policy shift back towards increasing birth rates was announced. In 2014, permanent contraception and advertising of birth control were to be outlawed.
Israel In
Israel,
Haredi families with many children receive economic support through generous governmental child allowances, government assistance in housing young religious couples, as well as specific funds by their own community institutions. Haredi women have an average of 6.7 children while the average Jewish Israeli woman has 3 children.
Japan Japan has experienced
a shrinking population for many years. The government is trying to encourage women to have children or to have more children – many Japanese women do not have children, or even remain single. The population is culturally opposed to
immigration. Some Japanese localities, facing significant population loss, are offering economic incentives.
Yamatsuri, a town of 7,000 just north of
Tokyo, offers parents $4,600 for the birth of a child and $460 a year for 10 years.
Myanmar In
Myanmar, the Population planning Health Care Bill requires some parents to space each child three years apart. The Economist, in 2015, stated that the measure was expected to be used against the persecuted Muslim
Rohingyas minority.
Pakistan Russia Russian President
Vladimir Putin directed Parliament in 2006 to adopt a 10-year program to stop the
sharp decline in
Russia's population, principally by offering financial incentives and subsidies to encourage women to have children. In August 2022, Russia revived the Soviet-era
Mother Heroine award for women with 10 children. In November 2024, Putin signed a bill into law that bans '
Childfree Propaganda' to boost birthrates in Russia.
Singapore Singapore has undergone two major phases in its population planning: first to slow and reverse the
baby boom in the
Post-World War II era; then from the 1980s onwards to encourage couples to have more children as the
birth rate had fallen below the
replacement-level fertility. In addition, during the
interim period,
eugenics policies were adopted. The
anti-natalist policies flourished in the 1960s and 1970s: initiatives advocating small families were launched and developed into the
Stop at Two programme, pushing for two-children families and promoting
sterilisation. In 1984, the government announced the ''Graduate Mothers' Scheme'', which favoured children of
more well-educated mothers; the policy was however soon abandoned due to the outcry in the
general election of the same year. Eventually, the government became
pro-natalist in the late 1980s, marked by its
Have Three or More plan in 1987. Singapore pays $3,000 for the first child, $9,000 in cash and savings for the second; and up to $18,000 each for the third and fourth.
Turkey In May 2012,
Turkey's Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan argued that abortion is murder and announced that legislative preparations to severely limit the practice are underway. Erdogan also argued that abortion and
C-section deliveries are plots to stall Turkey's economic growth. Prior to this move, Erdogan had repeatedly demanded that each couple have at least three children.
United States Enacted in 1970,
Title X of the
Public Health Service Act provides access to contraceptive services, supplies and information to those in need. Priority for services is given to people with low incomes. The Title X Family Planning program is administered through the
Office of Population Affairs under the Office of Public Health and Science. It is directed by the
Office of Family Planning. In 2007, Congress appropriated roughly $283 million for family planning under Title X, at least 90 percent of which was used for services in family planning clinics. which provide reproductive health care, including abortion. The education and services supplied by the Title X-funded clinics support young individuals and low-income families. The goals of developing healthy families are accomplished by helping individuals and couples decide whether to have children and when the appropriate time to do so would be. In the early 1970s, the United States Congress established the Commission on Population Growth and the American Future (Chairman
John D. Rockefeller III), which was created to provide recommendations regarding population growth and its social consequences. The Commission submitted its final recommendations in 1972, which included promoting contraceptives and liberalizing abortion regulations, for example.
Natalism in the United States In a 2004
editorial in
The New York Times,
David Brooks expressed the opinion that the relatively high birth rate of the United States in comparison to Europe could be attributed to social groups with "natalist" attitudes. The article is referred to in an analysis of the
Quiverfull movement. However, the figures identified for the demographic are extremely low. Former US Senator
Rick Santorum made natalism part of his platform for his
2012 presidential campaign. Many of those categorized in the General Social Survey as "Fundamentalist Protestant" are more or less natalist, and have a higher birth rate than "Moderate" and "Liberal" Protestants. However, Rick Santorum is not a Protestant but a practicing Catholic.
Uzbekistan It is reported that
Uzbekistan has been pursuing a policy of forced sterilizations, hysterectomies and IUD insertions since the late 1990s in order to impose population planning.
United Kingdom In the United Kingdom, access to contraception has been expanded through NHS-commissioned services, including the Pharmacy Contraception Service (PCS) launched in 2023 to initiate and continue oral contraception in community pharmacies, thereby increasing choice and relieving pressure on GP and specialist services. A 2023 study of a free online contraception service operating in the UK found the service was accessible to ethnically and socioeconomically diverse users, but that users obtaining emergency contraception did not commonly transition to ongoing oral methods, indicating that access initiatives may need to be paired with proactive counselling to support method continuation. More evidence shows that pharmacy-based delivery of contraception is acceptable to adolescents in high-income settings, supporting UK policy efforts to diversify access points beyond traditional clinics. == See also ==