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Pay more tax until the child is 18.
to much pie
5000.
It was forced on the people of China in 1979, by Chairman Deng soping, because China was over populated and afraid that it will increase.The Earth can't hold much.
About 20,000 and maybe even more per family.
the one child policy is actually good for the economy because parents don't have to spend so much money on so many kids. so that money is saved and that is definitely good for the economy.
If you kidnap a child you would be charged with child indangermeant and probably a few other things.
a lot... uh to be precise, more than how much a chinese woman earns a yr lol
Much has been said about the social implications of China's one child policy. In essence, the policy is depriving children of experiencing the type of childhood that their parents have experienced being raised in a family with siblings. Children learn to deal with social problems when they are raised around other children.
Much has been said about the social implications of China's one child policy. In essence, the policy is depriving children of experiencing the type of childhood that their parents have experienced being raised in a family with siblings. Children learn to deal with social problems when they are raised around other children.
China's two child policy, which was in place before 1980, had an estimated population of 1.8 billion by the year 2025. That is why, in 1980, when the population of China reached over 1000 million, it was changed to a one child policy. This resulted in a decreased estimate of 1.2 billion by the year 2025. Unfortunately it also resulted in much female infanticide and a lack of partners for men. So essentially Chinas two child policy was its first attempt at reducing its population, I would assume many of its rewards and punishments are similar to that of its one-child policy. I,e, improved housing, pensions and free education for sticking to the rules, and none of the above plus one hefty fine for breaking the rules. Unfortunately i don't know when the two child policy came into effect, or what the exact effect was if your talking about personal effects ( such as how having less children effected food, water or work sources etc - though one would assume with less mouths to feed then food and water would be more plentiful ) but I'm 100% sure this will be more helpful than the previous answer which went something like : two child policy? that's new - i thought it used to be a one-child policy.
You can't put a monetary value on people.