It depends on your per capita disposable income.
The Guangdong law stipulates a formula to calculate the fines for rich violators of one-child policy. For example, the per capita disposal income of the Tianhe District in Guangzhou last year was about 200,000 yuan. If one private enterprise boss in this district earned 200,000 yuan last year, he would pay a maximum social child-raising fee of: 20,000×6+(200,000-20,000)×2=480,000 yuan (about US$63,763) and a minimum 20,000×3+(200,000-20,000)×1=240,000 yuan (US$31,884).
Reference: http://www.china.org.cn/english/government/224913.htm
a fine
germany, comes up as having the best child protection policy, why
The one-child policy is also carried out in Tibet. For population concerns, The policy is made relatively loose to the Tibetan ethnic minority group. If they are willing, having a second child or maybe a third child is permitted. To people of the Han ethnic group or government officials, the policy should be strictly complied with.
only china
yes
In 2016, China changed its one-child policy to a two-child policy to address demographic challenges such as an aging population and gender imbalances. While the policy relaxes restrictions, there are still limitations and fines for exceeding the two-child limit in some regions.
because they were having too many children, and as China is the country with the biggest popularity, they don't want more people!
Procreation is synonymous with reproduction, so a procreation bill is some kind of law which pertains to having children. For example, China has a "one child" policy.
According to some Chinese fellow students, the one-child policy still stands with an exception. You could have 2 children if both your parents were an only child.
one child policy means that you are only allowed a certain amount of children and it is to calm down the population growth.
sad and alone
they don t children make nikes