
China, once infamous for its rigid one-child policy and harsh penalties for violators, is now reversing course in a dramatic way by offering financial incentives to encourage childbirth. Facing a historic population decline and the lowest birth rate since the 1940s, the government is rolling out cash subsidies and tax breaks to boost family formation. Cities like Hangzhou and Changsha have announced annual payouts ranging from 3,000 to over 10,000 yuan per child, while some provinces are offering even more generous rewards for larger families.But these efforts appear to be falling flat. Despite the new perks, surveys show that many young Chinese citizens remain reluctant to have children. High living costs, career pressures, a lack of childcare support, and changing social values are all contributing to a generation that increasingly sees parenthood as optional or undesirable.
China’s population push: From control to cash rewards
For over three decades, China’s family planning policies discouraged large families through fines, forced abortions, and intense surveillance. Today, that model has been replaced by a desperate push to slow demographic decline. In 2023, the country recorded a net population drop for the second year in a row. To counter this, various levels of government are now experimenting with incentives: free fertility services, extended maternity leave, housing discounts, and cash handouts.These cash offers, once unimaginable in a country where too many children once meant punishment, are now becoming commonplace. Cities like Shenzhen and Jinan have begun offering tiered child subsidies, while rural provinces are introducing financial assistance for young couples willing to start families. The shift reflects growing anxiety within the Chinese leadership over the long-term consequences of a shrinking and aging population, including labor shortages, reduced economic growth, and mounting pressure on the social welfare system.
Young generation unmoved by incentives
Polls and social media commentary suggest that the youth are not buying into the state’s fertility push. Many cite stagnant wages, soaring housing costs, and the intense pressure of parenting in China’s competitive society as reasons to delay or opt out of having children. Others simply prioritize personal freedom, mental health, or lifestyle over traditional family expectations.There is also a deep sense of disillusionment among many millennials and Gen Z citizens, who grew up under intense academic and societal pressures, and now face economic instability and a demanding work culture. The fear of not being able to provide a good life for a child—let alone for themselves—is steering many away from family life. Despite the government’s attempts to rebrand childbirth as a patriotic or economically beneficial act, the younger generation increasingly views parenthood as a burden rather than a blessing.