Today we have collated the 10 tricky words/phrases/terms from the editorial on China’s three child policy. Go through these words and see how many did you know already. Check their usage as well. This will surely help you to understand the sense the tricky words have conveyed in the editorial.
Difficult Word/ Term | Contextual Sense/ Definition |
Politburo | executive committee for communist parties |
Fertility rate | the ratio between the number of live births in a year and the whole female population of childbearing age |
Exhortation | an address or communication emphatically urging someone to do something |
Grapple | to begin to understand or deal with something in a direct or effective way |
Child-rearing | the process of bringing up a child or children |
Stringent | (of regulations, requirements, or conditions) strict, precise, and exacting |
Pledge | commit (a person or organization) by a solemn promise |
Entrench | establish (an attitude, habit, or belief) so firmly that change is very difficult or unlikely |
Revile | criticize in an abusive or angrily insulting manner |
Sterilisation | surgery to make a person or animal unable to produce offspring |
Six years after abandoning the “one child policy” of 1979, China’s Communist Party has now introduced a “three child policy”. The move is to “improve China’s population structure, actively respond to the ageing population, and preserve the country’s human resource advantages”, the party’s Politburo (executive committee for communist parties) said on May 31. The once-in-a-decade population census, released on May 11, may have prompted the latest change, recording 12 million births in 2020, the lowest since 1961. The census said there were 264 million in the 60 and over age group, up 5.44% since 2010 and accounting for 18.70% of the population. After the one child policy, China’s fertility rate (the ratio between the number of live births in a year and the whole female population of childbearing age) fell from 2.75 in 1979 to 1.69 in 2018. Monday’s announcement is as much an acknowledgement as may ever come of the unintended consequences of deeply intrusive family planning measures, going back even before 1979, to Mao’s “later, longer, fewer” campaign, which itself, ironically, followed his exhortations (an address or communication emphatically urging someone to do something) to have more children to build the workforce. The party officially still defends the one child policy — that it prevented an additional 300 million births. Yet, the urgency of recent measures suggests otherwise, as China grapples (to begin to understand or deal with something in a direct or effective way) with both an ageing and deeply gender-imbalanced population, and demographers’ worst fears of countries getting old before they get rich.
In 2013, China allowed couples to have a second child if either parent was an only child, with the two child policy introduced in 2015. Explaining why the measures did not boost birth rates, economists Jin Zhangfeng, Pan Shiyuan, and Zheng Zhijie wrote last year the two child policy “substantially increase[d] the number of second-child births” among those “less sensitive to child-rearing (the process of bringing up a child or children) costs” but “substantially decrease[d] the number of first-child births” attributing it to rising costs. “Other developing countries, even without China’s stringent ((of regulations, requirements, or conditions) strict, precise, and exacting) child-limitation policies, have also experienced declines,” they argued, suggesting “policy makers should give priority to reducing the child-rearing costs borne by prospective parents rather than simply relaxing or even abolishing birth quotas”. The latest announcement did acknowledge those broader structural problems, pledging (commit (a person or organization) by a solemn promise) to reduce families’ spending on education. It is, however, by no means an abandoning of China’s family planning policies. The entrenched (establish (an attitude, habit, or belief) so firmly that change is very difficult or unlikely) — and widely reviled (criticize in an abusive or angrily insulting manner) — family planning bureaucracy remains in place, and this week’s statement underlined that the “current reward and assistance system and preferential policies” for those following rules continue. Even leaving aside the strong moral argument against intrusive family planning — enforcement has meant forced abortions, sterilisations (surgery to make a person or animal unable to produce offspring), and other abuses, some of which are still being reported in parts such as the Muslim-majority Xinjiang region — China’s experience is a reminder of the unintended social and economic consequences of state-led demographic interventions.
Hope you got to know some new words/phrases which will definitely be useful in the English section of upcoming competitive exams. Wishing you all the best for your preparation!
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