China's Population Problem - Free Essays
China's
Population Problem
The Chinese
government has taken the enforcement of family planning and birthrate laws to
an extreme by violating the civil rights of its citizens, which has had bad
effects on the morale of its people (Whyte 161). China's population has grown to such an
enormous size that it has become a problem to both the people and
government. China, the most populous
country in the world, has an estimated population of about one thousand-one hundred-thirty
three point six million (Hsu 1).
Ninety-four percent of the population thrives in the eastern half of
China, which composes about forty-three percent of China's total area (Hsu
1). The eastern half of China contains
its most populous cities like Beijing, Shanghai, and Tianjin. However these cities have a low fertility
rate due to recent bandwagons of birth control.
The average density in the eastern half of China averages around
two-hundred and thirty-six people per square kilometer, whereas the density in
the west half averages around ten point six people per square kilometer (Hsu
1). Current enforcement of Chinese laws
prevents migration between provinces without proper authorization, as the
citizens in the west half of China have a desire to live in a more urban life
where jobs can be found easier, and the citizens in the more populous eastern
half have a stronger desire to live in the more rural western China (Hsu 4).
The Chinese have
always had a large population (Hsu 1).
Even in ancient times where the population would never fall below sixty
million (Hsu 1). Later, in the
eighteenth century the population rose exceedingly and China became the
strongest and most economically wealthy (Hsu 1). By the time the Qing Dynasty ruled, the
fertile people of China had reached a population of three-hundred million (Hsu
1). The birthrate in China did decline
in the nineteen-fifties due to campaigning by the government on birth control
(Hsu 1). However, after the population
decreased the government turned their attention to other matters while the
population slowly crept up again. Once
again in the nineteen-seventies the population became an issue and it received
the governments full attention. In order
that the government might resolve this problem, the "Wan Xi Shao"
policy, or the "marry later, give longer spacing between children, and
have fewer children" policy began to be enforced (Hsu 2). This policy proved to have some effect but it
did not stop the fertile people of China, and the population has steadily risen
to the current population (Hsu 2).
The recent laws
imposed on the people of China include the "One child per family
law"(Hsu 2). This law began to be
enforced in nineteen-seventy-nine, so that the government might achieve its
goal of reducing the rate of natural increase to five per thousand by
nineteen-eighty-five, and to zero by the year two-thousand(Hsu 2). The immense population had become straining
on the economy and resources (Linden 1).
Migration to less populous areas of China became restricted so that the
government might be able to control the population more effectively and easily
(Hsu 4). Currently, the "one child
per family" law still exist, but it has become more flexible, in that it
allows a second child but with a longer interval between the first (Hsu
2). Through the health service programs
across China, birth control pills, inter uterine devices, condoms, diaphragms ,
foams, and jellies had been distributed in a matter of time (C.Q.W.R. 1). The government made life easier for those who
chose to obey this law by offering incentives such as: paid maternity leave, time off for breast
feeding, free child care, free contraceptives, and paid time off for abortions
and sterilization (Ehrlich 205). Other
rewards for obeying this law and not exceeding the limit included better
housing and educational opportunities for their children (Ehrlich 205). Doctors "volunteered" their
services to sterilize couples who had finished childbearing, and doctors also
provided free abortions at local clinics and hospitals (Ehrlich 205). However the government has encountered
resistance in rural areas and this has led to many abuses, and one of the
reasons why the government has performed many coerced abortions and
sterilizations (C.Q.W.R. 1).
The Chinese
government has committed brutal and unjustified acts against offenders of the
"one child" policy, and in general the enforcement of these laws has
taken the governments undivided attention (Ehrlich 205). Resistance by traditional citizens who mainly
live in less populous areas, have received involuntary abortions and
sterilizations. China has gone to great
lengths to control population, and it has involved reprogramming citizens to
have smaller families and to actively use family planning (Ehrlich 205). Family planning and policies limiting the
number of children in families has received attention from many countries and
issues like this requires the governments full attention and prevents them from
focusing on more important affairs like scientific advancements and resolving
poverty and homelessness (Linden 2).
China's family planning policies and children limiting laws can be
considered as reasonable and in the interest of the people of China, but
because the government takes the enforcement of these laws to such an extreme
shows that they have little consideration for the Chinese citizens. Means of
controlling population that infringe upon a human beings civil rights have no
place among laws and should merely be taken as a suggestion by the Chinese
citizens, and in no way forced upon them.
If China's
population received no attention the environment and ecosystem would not be
able to with stand the force of such an impact of an immense population (Linden
1). Numerous species of animals would be put in danger due to the destruction
of their homes for housing needs, and some even driven to the verge of
extinction (Linden 1). Once lush green
forests and jungles teaming with life would be swarming with microbes,
cockroaches, weeds, and rats, all of which would thrive off of such conditions
(Linden 1). The best and most reasonable
way to prevent the destruction of the environment and the overuse natural
resources involves the reduction of propagation
by nearly half (Linden 1).
The Earth has
encountered many problems over the years with the environment and the
ecosystem, many of which relate proportionally to population size. The
consideration of family planning policies and laws remains feasible to most
governments, however inappropriate the people targeted might deem them. A
governments position on a subject has not always proven to have justice in the favor of its people, but in
the long run proves beneficial most of the time. History has shown that
previous attempts to control population have failed and recent laws enforced
appear to be taken to extremes by the government. However primitive their ways
of accomplishing this have shown to be, it must not be overlooked that it has
proved effective in reducing China's immense population.
Works Cited
1. "Congressional Quarterly Weekly
Report" (C. Q. W. R.), June 5, 1993.
2. Ehrlich, Paul R. The population explosion,
Simon and Schauster, New
York, 1990.
3. Hsu, Mei-Ling, "Population of China:
Large is not beautiful" Focus Spring 1992:
vol. 42, no.1.
4. Linden, Eugene. "Too Many People"
Times fall 1992: vol. 140, issue 27, p.
64.
5. Whyte, Martin King, Urban Life in
Contemporary China, The University of
Chicago press, Chicago, 1984.
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