
China is offering couples a subsidy to have children.
China’s birth rate has been falling for years, even after the end of the one-child policy in 2015. Fewer couples are choosing to have multiple children due to economic pressures, lifestyle changes, and urbanization.
China is offering couples a subsidy program aimed at reversing its declining birth rate, as demographic challenges threaten the country’s long-term economic stability.
In the beginning of this year, families will receive 3,600 yuan (approximately $500) annually for each child under the age of three. The program also offers partial subsidies for children born before 2025 who are still under three years old.
The announcement comes as China recorded its third consecutive year of population decline in 2024. Despite previous efforts—including lifting the one-child policy in 2015 and allowing up to three children per family by 2021—birth rates continue to fall. Experts cite soaring childcare costs, job insecurity, and economic pressures as key reasons why many couples are choosing to delay or avoid parenthood altogether.
This new financial support marks one of the most significant national initiatives to date. While the central government has standardized the $500 annual subsidy, some regions are enhancing the offer. In Hohhot, the capital of Inner Mongolia, local authorities now provide up to 100,000 yuan (roughly $14,000) for each third child and beyond. Families receive this amount in 10,000-yuan yearly installments until the child turns ten—a dramatic increase from the city’s 2023 offer of just 5,000 yuan total.
Demographers warn that the shrinking working-age population poses a major risk to China’s economic engine, especially its labor-intensive manufacturing sector. With the median age now over 40—up from 32 just twenty years ago—government officials are sounding the alarm. Mounting concerns over the future of the workforce are being compounded by ongoing trade tensions with the United States, including tariff threats from former President Donald Trump.
Trade Mind Nation:
More births mean a larger future workforce, which could help sustain China’s economic growth long-term and helps to increased consumption within China due to population growth can impact global demand for goods and services.
A growing population may attract more foreign investment into China and increase global trade ties, with more young people entering the workforce in China, it could offset global labor shortages, especially as many developed countries face aging populations and shrinking workforces.
Early AI Education and Infrastructure Investments for Long-Term Growth:
Babies today won’t immediately fix that, but it will protect China’s interests in years to come. (Children as young as 6 years old are already being offered AI classes in the country.) Subsidies might help, but Emma Zang, a professor at Yale University, tells NBC News that a more effective strategy would be an investment in infrastructure, such as affordable child care, parental leave, and job protections for women.