2.7 - Population Policies
natal
relating to birth
China's One Child Policy
- Law created in 1979 to slow down population growth and to prevent overpopulation. the law ended in 2015.
Pro-Natalist Policies
Government policies created to increase the rate of natural increase/total fertility rate
examples of pro-natalist countries
Singapore, Italy, France, Japan, Sweden, Finland, Norway, Estonia
Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
The average number of children a woman will have throughout her childbearing years.
dependency ratio
The number of people under age 15 and over age 64 compared to the number of people active in the labor force
Neo-Malthusians
a belief that the world is characterized by scarcity and competition in which too many people fight for few resources. Pessimists who warn of the global ecopolitical dangers of uncontrolled population growth
examples of antinatalist policies
forced sterilization, state sponsored contraceptives, tax incentives for having small families
Anti-Natalist Policies
government policies to reduce the rate of natural increase/total fertility rate
Replacement level fertility
the number of children a couple must have to maintain their current populations (2.1 in developed countries, 2.7 in developing countries)
family planning
the practice of regulating the number or spacing of offspring through the use of birth control
subsidize
to pay for fully or partially
gender imbalance in China & India
traditional preference and use of gender-selection technology for last 30 years has led to imbalance of too many young men and too few young women to marry in parts of China & India today