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Socioeconomic determinants of China's urban fertility
Authors:Chaoze Cheng  Paul Maxim
Affiliation:(1) Department of Sociology, University of Western Ontario, N6G 5C2 London, Ontario, Canada;(2) 986 Western Rd., N6G 1G4 London, Ontario, Canada
Abstract:This paper examines socioeconomic forces other than population policies and family planning programs that have affected the fertility transition in urban China. The authors argue that before and since the intensification of population planning activities, the government influenced fertility directly and indirectly through socialization of the economy, the transformation of the Chinese family, and the provision of education, employment, health, medical, welfare, cultural, and related services in urban areas. The various social institutions and subsystems of society have greatly weakened the motivation for large families. The byproducts of the slow urbanization process in urban China including housing shortages, unemployment, rising living standards, changes in the cost of raising a child, and urban-rural downward mobility have affected the social and economic costs of childbearing, which in turn have affected the postponement of childbearing. Thus, our considerations of urban China's fertility transition must be broadened to include the issues of social development strategy in Chinese urban experience.
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