•Do not apply to minorities or urban areas
• Subject to monetary fines if break the policy
• In some places, couples allowed to have one more child if first is a girl
• Not strictly enforced in some areas
If people did not obide by the one child policy in china then they were intantly charged a lot of money(more than one women would earn in a month) and there benifits were instantly taken away from them. Such as, free education and health care.
Most families are only allowed to have a single child; there aer a few exceptions, however. Rural families can have a second child if the first's a girl or disabled, and foreigners or ethnic minorities are completely free from the policy.
Without the one child policy, China's population would grow to approximately 1.8 billion by 2025 which is the reason that the Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping established the one child policy in 1979.
Under China's one child policy, which was in place from 1979 to 2015, most couples were restricted to having only one child. There were exceptions, such as rural families allowed to have a second child if their first child was a girl. The policy was enforced through various measures, including financial penalties, employment consequences, and sometimes even forced abortions or sterilizations, particularly in the early years of implementation. The policy aimed to control population growth, alleviate pressure on resources, and promote economic development.
there are loads e.g you have to be 24 to have a child ...............................
China's two child policy, which was in place before 1980, had an estimated population of 1.8 billion by the year 2025. That is why, in 1980, when the population of China reached over 1000 million, it was changed to a one child policy. This resulted in a decreased estimate of 1.2 billion by the year 2025. Unfortunately it also resulted in much female infanticide and a lack of partners for men. So essentially Chinas two child policy was its first attempt at reducing its population, I would assume many of its rewards and punishments are similar to that of its one-child policy. I,e, improved housing, pensions and free education for sticking to the rules, and none of the above plus one hefty fine for breaking the rules. Unfortunately i don't know when the two child policy came into effect, or what the exact effect was if your talking about personal effects ( such as how having less children effected food, water or work sources etc - though one would assume with less mouths to feed then food and water would be more plentiful ) but I'm 100% sure this will be more helpful than the previous answer which went something like : two child policy? that's new - i thought it used to be a one-child policy.
I believe that the main rule to help with China's population problems is that each family can only have one child. in other words, only one child is allowed per family.
As long as your child is in college full time, most insurances will cover your son until he is 25. You should ask your specific insurance policy about their rules and guidelines.
•The killing of innocent girls (babies) due to the fact that a father wanted a son as his first, and in some cases only born.• In some areas illegal/ forced abortions are used so people will keep within the rules of the 'one child policy'.• It effects the child in various ways: no brother or sister the grow up with/loneliness; a big reputation and responsibility to grow up to; father may not be happy with the fact that he has a daughter and not a son.• Having the 'one child policy' may lead to an aging population because there will be less children (more older people in population).
all schools have rules
common rules=public policy?
Rules and regulations.
China is a communist dictatorship.