Two-child study quells fears of a baby boom
By Xu Wei in Yicheng, Shanxi | China Daily | Updated: 2013-12-26 07:36
Many residents in pilot area opted against adding to family, often due to finances
Editor's note: The relaxation of China's decades-old family planning policy to allow more couples to have a second child has been hailed as one of the key events of 2013. China Daily sent reporters to examine how the policy change is expected to affect people's lives.
Twelve years ago, Su Meiling and her husband Qiao Wenjie decided they would have only one child, even before their son was born. They got a certificate for helping promote the one-child policy and received a monthly subsidy of 50 yuan ($8.20).
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