Chinese couple pay £130,000 to have a second child to avoid one-child policy

In addition, a growing number of rich families now choose simply to pay the
fine, which is a multiple of between three and ten times the average
after-tax income of the city where they live.

Aspirational advertisements in Beijing, including propaganda posters from the
local government, often now show families with two children, rather than one.

In Wenzhou, roughly half of all families now have two children, according to
the local government. In recent years, ten other families have paid fees of
more than one million yuan.

In 2000, these fines were renamed as “social fostering fees” and are
supposed to represent the added cost to society of the extra children.

The fees have become a significant, and rapidly growing, source of revenue for
the government.

The website of the People’s Daily, the official party mouthpiece, estimated in
2010 that they were as high as 20 billion yuan (£2.05 billion) a year, and
He Yafu, a demographics analyst, calculated the government had made as much
as 2 trillion yuan since 1980 from the fines.

The National Population and Family Planning Commission has said the social
fostering fees are not fines and that all of the money goes to the public
coffers.

“In most cases, it is up to the Family Planning bureau to decide on the
size of the fine,” said Chen Fugui, a 48-year-old tea trader from
Quanzhou who has paid fines to have four daughters and one son. “I paid
3,000 yuan for my son, after two daughters, but that was 19 years ago. I
paid 50,000 yuan for my youngest daughter, seven years ago. I think if they
think you can pay a lot, they try to aim for the largest sum possible,”
he said.

“Of course, if you have good contacts with the local government, you can
avoid the hefty fines. Of course the Family Planning people are looking to
line their pockets, but they do not want to upset everyone locally,
especially anyone big or rich. I think 50,000 yuan is a fair sum, but a
million is too much. Maybe the government wants to set an example, but in
fact this sort of example never actually stops anyone,” he added.

Families who refuse to pay the fines will not obtain any registration
documents for their children, leaving them unable to get a proper job or
medical care. In some cases, officials have confiscated babies.

Recent scandals involving the one-child policy saw Tian Liang, a gold
medal-winning diver at the 2000 and 2004 Olympic Games, stripped of his
position at a provincial swimming administration for having a second child
in Hong Kong. It is not clear if he has had to pay a fine levied on him.

Meanwhile, there was public anger at a rich couple who had hired surrogate
mothers to bear them eight children, which they then put in the care of a
gaggle of nannies. “In this society, if you have money you can have
miracles,” one commentator wrote on Sina Weibo, the Chinese equivalent
of Twitter.

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