Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
China Ends One-Child Policy, Still Limiting Births
China Ends One-Child Policy, Still Limiting Births
Dec 19, 2025 2:49 AM

The BBC reported today that China is ending its one-child policy, providing the following overview:

Introduced in 1979, the policy meant that many Chinese citizens – around a third, China claimed in 2007 – could not have a second child without incurring a fineIn rural areas, families were allowed to have two children if the first was a girlOther exceptions included ethnic minorities and – since 2013 – couples where at least one was a single childCampaigners say the policy led to forced abortions, female infanticide, and the under-reporting of female birthsIt was also implicated as a cause of China’s gender imbalance

Before everyone celebrates, China did not, however, eliminate all limits but changed the limit to two children. Certainly this is a huge improvement and a step in the right direction, but it is not without its own economic, ethical, and political problems.

According to the BBC, the motivation for the change of attitude in recent years, leading to the new policy, has been purely economic: “Over time, the policy has been relaxed in some provinces, as demographers and sociologists raised concerns about rising social costs and falling worker numbers.”

The benefits, however, go far beyond this, albeit important, economic consideration. As noted above, the policy has led to forced abortions, and gender-selective abortions and infanticide are thought to be behind the gender imbalance in China. I’m pro-life, so abortion is bad enough on its own as far as I’m concerned, but even most pro-choice Americans would find those practices troubling.

So most people ought to see this as a significant victory for human rights in China, especially for women and girls.

However, a two-child policy will still keep China below replacement rate fertility, even if every woman in China had two children. This means that while it will slow the economic woes of demographic decline, it still will not stop that decline.

Furthermore, after 36 years of the one-child policy, the BBC reported that China has had “400 million births” less than it would have had during that time. Meanwhile, it will take roughly two decades before the increased births of their new two-child policy will bring increased workers to China. So, economically speaking, it is a good thing, but it may still be too little, too late.

As far as human rights go, China still has a limit on births. Forced abortions and gender-selective abortions may significantly decrease, and that is certainly a good thing, but I don’t expect they will go away. Some people will still want more children than two, and others will just unintentionally get pregnant a third time. And if one’s first child is a daughter and one really wants a son to continue the family name, gender-selective abortions and infanticide will likely remain in demand for second pregnancies as well.

More than this (HT David Koyzis), there is the more fundamental problem that family size is simply not the domain of the state. It is a violation of the sovereignty of the family for the state to impose such limits. Any such limit from the state is a denial of the freedom and rights of families.

As Abraham Kuyper put it in Our Program, “In the matter of ruling your household, do plement the state, or does the plement you? … Did you receive the power to exercise authority in your household from the state, or do you have this power by the grace of God?”

And long ago, the psalmist wrote,

Like arrows in the hand of a warrior,

So are the children of one’s youth.

Happy is the man who has his quiver full of them…. (Psalm 127:4-5)

This psalm, like everything else in the Bible, was written in the context of a largely agrarian society that actually might have had to worry about the Malthusian Trap, where food supply cannot keep pace with population increases. In our own time, when we have enjoyed sustained economic growth for more than the last two hundred years, we have all the more reason to make those words our own.

We can be thankful and rejoice with Chinese families that their country moved one step closer to being a place where every child is ed with joy today. But let us not forget that they still have work to be done not only for their economic good, but for basic human rights and liberty as well.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Buckley on law and Christian morality
From a CT interview in 1995 by Michael Cromartie: Certain things which the market authorizes simply in terms of law are unchristian and ought not to be done. The big issue today has to do with the fidelity of marriages. The tendency now to leave your wife because you have an infatuation with a younger woman of tenderer flesh is an enormous temptation. It’s carnal, and it’s also easy to justify with all the solipsistic reasoning that we hear today....
Coal-powered hybrids
As I said in 2006: Without too much exaggeration, you could say that today’s electric cars are really coal-powered. If you look at the sources of electricity in the US, “coal provides over half of the electricity flowing into American homes.” That means that in one ideal world of the alternative fuel crowd, when you plug your car in, you’re plugging it in to a coal plant (this is also why the idea of consumer carbon credits is catching on)....
Hug your favorite liberal today
Founda study on sociobiology in The Economist (of all places). This passage on the development of liberal vice conservative tendencies was worth a chuckle: Dr Wilson and Dr Storm found several unexpected differences between the groups. Liberal teenagers always felt more stress than conservatives, but were particularly stressed if they could not decide for themselves whom they spent time with. Such choice, or the lack of it, did not change conservative stress levels. Liberals were also loners, spending a quarter...
Imprisonment and government expenditures
There’s a lot of consternation, much of it justified, about the news that now 1% of the population of the United States is incarcerated. Especially noteworthy is parison of the rate of imprisonment with institutionalization in mental health facilities over the last century. But a breathless headline like this just cannot pass without ment: “Michigan is 1 of 4 states to spend more on prison than college.” Given the fact that policing, including imprisonment, is pretty clearly a legitimate function...
Some problems with Protestantism
Following up on our discussion of the Pew survey on the American religious landscape, I have a few thoughts as to what plagues American Protestantism, particularly of the evangelical variety, and it has to do precisely with the “catholicity” of Protestantism. To the extent that people are leaving Protestantism, or are searching for another denomination within the broadly Protestant camp, I think there are at least two connected precipitating causes. (A caveat: there are many, many individual and anecdotal exceptions...
William F. Buckley – 1925-2008
Buckley & Sirico – Acton’s 2nd Annual Dinner – May 12, 1992 One of many remembrances at National Review Online: Bill died doing what he loved doing — he never left this movement he built, never left NR, he never stopped writing, never left home, never left thinking. And he’s as much a part of us today and forever as he was all these years. He’s left a remarkable legacy. ...
Conference for clergywomen in Wesleyan tradition
UMAction, the Methodist wing of IRD that supports traditional and historic Methodism is encouraging women in the United Methodist and Wesleyan tradition in ministry to consider attending the “Come to the Water” conference in Nashville from April 10-13. John Lomperis of IRD appropriately notes, “Many evangelical clergywomen in the United Methodist Church feel sidelined or excluded in some of the denomination’s official clergy women’s networks because of a dominance of intolerant theological liberalism.” Just last night I was talking to...
WFB: In Memoriam
Buckley & Sirico – Acton’s 2nd Annual Dinner – May 12, 1992 Rev. Robert Sirico reflects on the life of William F. Buckley, Jr., who died in his study on Wednesday, praising him as a friend, a literary genius, and a supporter of the Acton Institute. Sirico writes, “He will be lauded by numerous pendants and scribes for the incredible number of his plishments, preeminent of which is his historic role as godfather of the modern conservative/libertarian movement in the...
Solid economics at L’Osservatore Romano
Good news is not always so hard to find. Case in point: Free-market economics is making eback at the Vatican’s daily newspaper L’Osservatore Romano. Previously known as a dry read, L’Osservatore Romano (which means The Roman Observer in English) now contains provocative interviews and real news stories from around the world. This is attributable to the paper’s new editor, Giovanni Maria Vian, who was appointed to the post by Pope Benedict last October (see here for the interesting background on...
Radio Free Acton – Remembering Buckley and contemplating religious consumerism
On this week’s edition of Radio Free Acton, Rev. Robert A. Sirico pays tribute to the late William F. Buckley, the RFA regulars are joined by Professor Joseph Knippenberg from Oglethorp University in Atlanta, Georgia to discuss the Pew Forum’s newly released research on the American religious landscape, and we listen in to some bonus audio from Dr. Glenn Sunshine’s Acton Lecture Series address, Wealth, Work and the Church. You can listen at this link. With regard to the discussion...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved