Imagine a little newlywed woman. People who want children have two or more, perhaps two or more children, but there are strict rules in her country; she can only have one. So she and her husband applied for a baby as they needed permission from the government. Then she got pregnant, and five months later they knew it was a girl. She was forced to abort her baby. How will they respond? Nothing, because they have no choice. If the woman is genuine, she will live in China and her family will be ruled by government and one child policy.
This is a unique situation in China. Due to one-child policy in the late 1970s, the population of China declined rapidly. Recently, in order to replace China's declining population, the Chinese government replaced this policy with the policy of two children. And let people stabilize and stabilize. In Singapore, the population has increased or decreased indefinitely, so the government began implementing programs such as "stop by two places", "If there is room afford, three or more children work" and "Love boat".
The one-child policy, an official plan initiated by the Chinese central government from the late 1970s to the early 1980s, aims to limit the majority of household units in the country to each child. The rationale for implementing this policy is to reduce the growth rate of China's huge population. The plan will be announced at the end of 2015 and will be completed in early 2016. When China established the People's Republic in 1949, the use of family planning and family planning began to be promoted, but before Mao's death these efforts were still sporadic and voluntary. Zedong in 1976. By the end of the 1970s, the population of China soon reached 1 billion people, the new practical leadership of this country led by Deng Xiaoping began seriously considering suppressing rapid population growth.