China may begin a campaign of forced pregnancy, ordering young couples to get married and have more babies if the demographic challenges become more serious, according to Steven Mosher, president of the Population Research Institute.
These measures are expected to have limited effects, according to Mr. Mosher, who was among the first U.S. social scientists who worked in China after Washington normalized diplomatic ties with Beijing in 1979. To stem the ongoing demographic decline, every woman would have to have three children, given that decades of a one-child policy and a traditional preference for sons have resulted in fewer women of childbearing age now.
Although China has gone from punishing couples for having too many children to encouraging them to have more, it may not be easy to change how the public views big families after decades of indoctrination.
“‘We were wrong, we made a mistake’—of course the Chinese Communist Party would never say that.”
“Young people without hope for the future, without jobs, without the ability to start businesses, are not going to get married and have children,” Mr. Mosher said.
With fewer babies born in recent decades, more Chinese are now growing old. One in five people in the country were ages 60 and older last year, official data show. The working-age population—those between ages 16 and 59—accounted for only 61 percent of the total population in 2023, down from more than 70 percent almost a decade ago.
Facing a quickly aging, shirking population, Mr. Mosher said he’s worried that the regime’s officials may take the family planning drive to new and opposite extremes.
“I’m very much afraid, though, that the Chinese Communist Party will not stop at incentives; that at one point in time, if the situation gets more and more serious, as I think it will, the Chinese Communist Party will say to young women: ‘We are now ordering you to get married and ordering you to have children. Here is your quota for births of three, and you must produce these children within the next six years,’” he said.
“Now that sounds outrageous, of course, it’s outrageous.”
But it’s no more outrageous than the one-child policy that ran from the 1980s to 2016, Mr. Mosher said, calling the rule the “worst offense against humanity in China.”
For decades, China strictly limited most couples to just one baby. Children who were born outside the one-child plan wouldn’t be able to get hukou, a household registration document for Chinese citizens to attend school, work in state-run companies, marry, or even open a bank account. Many women who violated the family planning policy were punished with forced abortion or sterilization.
“Hundreds of millions of unborn Chinese children never saw the light of day because their mothers were forcibly aborted at four, six, eight, even nine months of pregnancy, and [they were] sometimes killed after birth,” Mr. Mosher said.
“I think the population decline is being driven by the Chinese Communist Party.”