(File photo)
China's top family planning authority has stressed that the current one-child policy will be implemented until legislators approve the revision of law to allow all couples to have two children.
China needs to readjust its family planning management, put in place adequate public services, and promote birth monitoring and risk prevention before the new policy comes into effect, said Wang Peian, deputy head of the National Health and Family Planning Commission.
The Communist Party of China Central Committee announced in a proposal on Oct. 29 the scrapping of current one-child policy and adoption of the two-child policy in an attempt to balance population growth and offset the burden of an aging population.
A final plan for the policy change will be ratified by the annual session of China's top legislature in March.
China's population is expected to rise from the current 1.368 billion to hit a peak of 1.45 billion in 2029, said Wang, indicating the scale of the preparation needed for these extra births.
The population will slightly drop to 1.38 billion in 2050, Wang added.
China has 140 million women of child-bearing age who have already raised a child, of which 37 percent are allowed to have a second child under the current one-child policy, according to the official.
The two-child policy will mean over 30 million more people in the labor force by 2050 and an decrease of 2 percentage points in the share of elderly people in the Chinese population, Wang added.
The family planning policy was introduced in the late 1970s to rein in the surging population by limiting most urban couples to one child and most rural couples to two children, if the first child born was a girl.
In November 2013, the one-child policy was eased to allow couples to have two children if one of the parents was an only child.
Read more:
2-child policy to add 0.5% to growth: official
A family planning official said that China's adoption of a two-child policy will help boost the country's economic growth rate by about 0.5 percent by increasing the size of the labor force and stimulating consumption, while experts worry that the new policy will aggravate employment discrimination against women.
Beijing expected to implement two-child policy in 2016
Beijing is expected to implement the two-child policy in 2016 after legislators approve the revision of a law to allow couples to have two children, local authorities said Tuesday.