Vietnam
scraps planned parenthood in revised population policy
The country is expected to welcome its 100 millionth citizen
before 2030.
The news was
announced on Tuesday at a press conference held by Vietnam’s Ministry of
Health.
“Between
1960 and 1993, our population policy was to encourage that families should
not have more than two children each,” said Nguyen Van Tan, deputy
director general of the General Office for Population and Family Planning.
“Now we want
to encourage each family to have two children and keep the birth rate as
close as possible to the current replacement fertility rate of 2.1 children
per woman,” he said.
Instead of a
blanket policy to limit the number of births per family, areas with high
birth rates would be encouraged to give birth less while those with low birth
rates would be encouraged to produce more births, he elaborated.
While
families in Vietnam have been allowed to have as many children as they wish
without facing legal or administrative punishments since 1993, they
are still encouraged to have one or two children, according to Tan.
In 2008, a
new directive came into effect, stipulating that members of the
Communist Party of Vietnam be penalized for having a third child and
expeled from the Party for having any more than three children.
Since
2013, the policy for Party members has been relaxed, when they
will only be dismissed for having five or more children.
A
recent online survey conducted by the General Office for Population and
Family Planning found that 81.3 percent of 700,000 respondents only wanted to
have one or two children, with the rest expressing their wish for three or
more.
Based on these
findings, Tan concluded, there should be no concern over whether Vietnam’s
relaxed population policy would result in an unwanted population explosion.
In the
1960s, an average woman in northern Vietnam would give birth to around six
children, according to Nguyen Thien Nhan, Party chief of Ho Chi Minh City.
Since the
implementation of the two-child policy in the 1960s, the country’s fertility
rate had dropped dramatically to three children per woman in the 1980s and
two children per woman from 2005 until now, Nhan said.
Ho Chi Minh
City currently reports the lowest fertility rate amongst women in Vietnam, at
only around 1.45 children per woman, posing a possible threat to the city’s
workforce.
If Vietnam
is able to maintain a stable replacement fertilty rate, its population is
forecast to reach 104 million by 2030, and 113-115 million by 2049.
The country
currently has an official population of 94 million, a number that is
increasing by 850,000-900,000 per year.
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