To a certain degree yes. If you have another child in China you will get punished by not receiving the baby milk money which is used to buy baby milk powder for your child. Also I believe that you get fined quite a bit.
I highly doubt it. If the child is not on the policy, then sorry to say, they're not covered. You will need to go in and put them on the policy, if you want that is...
one child policy, to go to college you have to be intelligent. you have to be ugly to get into a ugly contest and you the one who is reading this fits in
you will likely have to 'exclude' this child from your policy....and this means NEVER EVER EVER let him drive if he is excluded...if you do and he's in an accident there will be NO coverage at all for your vehicle or the other parties........
yes there was some positive efectcs one of them was that there was a significant amount of resources to go round and that it made the population level up .
That depends on weather or not your 17 year old has their insurance on the parents policy. It will go up if the child is on the parents policy, but if the child has their own policy, it won't. But it will be cheaper if the child is added on to the parents policy. My husband is a North Carolina State Trooper so I know alot about insurance. Also, call around and go online for the cheapest rates.
Most girls would be dead as when a women gets married to a man she goes and looks after her husbands parents and leaves her own mother behind. Also it is 'traditional' for the women to go with the man. In China men are seen as stronger people than women so chinese parents living in china when the one-child policy was very strict usally abandoned or killed their baby daughter in order to have a nother go for a male. Today the one child policy is very realxed and so girls do not get killed or abandoned anymore.
If a child has a driver's license, the child has to be listed as a driver somewhere on an insurance policy. The child can have their own policy and then the parents rates would not go up. Usually it is less expensive for a child to be listed on a parents policy rather than getting their own policy. If the child truly is not driving a household vehicle than the only way for that child to not be rated is to turn in the driver's license. That should be fine since the child "isn't driving anyway". The child can still get a state I.D. that isn't a driver's license. If the child isn't going to drive there is no reason to list them. The previous is correct, just should have gotten an I.D. and not a drivers license. It may depend on the country or state. Where I am the insurance company would have no way of knowning if someone in you house got a drivers license without you letting them know.
Not unless she is also on one of the parents passports - if not she must get her own new passport
Possibly, if the parent still receiving support files for modification based on your financial change in circumstances.
It depends on the school system's policy and on why you have to go to summer school.
A life insurance policy since 1953 needs to be cashed in
I'm not totally sure what you are asking but it sounds like the child died. If the child died and the child was insured, the money will go to the beneficiary listed on the policy. If your brother surrendered parental rights, this child is no longer his, so I seriously doubt he has any claim whatsoever.