Big regional gap in extra birth fines
Updated: 2013-09-26 13:39
(chinadaily.com.cn)
|
|||||||||||
The stark regional gap in the amount of social support fees collected in different provinces and municipalities has sparked intense discussions over regulation of the fees.
Chinese families with more than the allowed number of children have to pay the fee, in order to compensate for the government's spending on public services and the use of natural resources.
Jiangxi topped all 19 provinces and municipalities, which published reports on the fees in 2012, by more than 3.3 billion yuan ($540 million), while Qinghai only got about 3.5 million yuan ($570,000), Beijing News reported.
Wu Youshui, a lawyer from Zhejiang province, questioned the credibility of the statistics.
Wu submitted applications to the family planning commissions and treasury bureaus of 31 provincial-level political authorities in July, requesting the reports of how the money was levied and spent in 2012.
However, there are also views that defend the authenticity of the numbers. Lu Jiehua, a demographics professor at Peking University, said the different amounts can be justified with regional differences on demographic structures and policies.
Qinghai, a plateau-dominated area, offers more preferential birth policies to boost its labor pool, while many people in Jiangxi, an already densely populated province without the same tolerance for a second child, are still willing to take the risk given the labor-intensive economic structure.
Related Stories
Auditor to monitor family planning fines 2013-09-05 07:58
Family planning fines reach 12.8 billion yuan 2013-08-30 21:11
Family planning fines spark controversy 2013-08-08 06:31
Family planning officials killed 2013-07-23 19:50
Today's Top News
UN resolution on Syria's chemical weapons urged
Death toll rises to 328 in SW Pakistan's quake
China, UK set to resume high-level dialogue
China reduces market intervention
Xi promotes 'mass line' campaign
China gaining military drones' share
Trending news across China
Youth short on safe sex awareness
Hot Topics
Lunar probe , China growth forecasts, Emission rules get tougher, China seen through 'colored lens', International board,
Editor's Picks
Nuclear plants see growth |
Nurses embark on journey to the West |
Old soldiers receive badge of recognition |
Watchdog bites with no favor |
New energy solutions |
Xinjiang scores on the national stage at last |