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Mu Guangzong
Professor and Ph.D Supervisor of Population Research Institute, Peking University, and also the Syndic of China Population Association and the Gerontological Association of China. His main research interests are Institutional Demography, Social Gerontology, Population and Sustainable Development.
August 11, 2014
A two-child policy for all
We should welcome rather than be afraid of a baby boom, because it could effectively resist three major risks: population loss, population decline and an unbalanced population.
May 18, 2014
Time to further ease family planning policy
Further easing the family planning policy will not lead to a population boom, which the authorities fear, because demographic development always moves in waves.
February 26, 2014
To give or not to give birth abroad
At the beginning of this century, many women from countries and regions like the Republic of Korea were traveling to the US to give birth to ensure that their children got US citizenship.
February 23, 2014
Moving towards equal access to pensions
A good institutional design should be conducive to possible change. This is just what a unified pension system offers.
December 3, 2013
Toward a balanced population
China's demographic dividends have been deteriorating since the early 1980s because of the family planning policy, under which most urban couples could have only one child. Among the problems it has created is the yawning gender imbalance.
November 18, 2013
A beginning, not an end
The adjustment is considered to be a breakthrough in relaxing China's family planning policy. However, this step should be a beginning, rather than the end, of family planning policy reform.
August 15, 2013
Family policy deserves a rethink
It's time the authorities weighed the pros and cons of the family planning policy, which was implemented in the late 1970s.
May 28, 2013
The travails of having a second child
The government should respect people's individual, rather than social, decisions when it comes to family planning.
January 28, 2013
Worrying demographic changes
It's time for China to seriously think about a moderate and optimized fertility, as the base line for sustainable population development, as well as a countermeasure to possible population risks.
July 17, 2012
Structural imbalances in population
The nation's low birthrate is an increasingly severe problem that will accelerate the aging of the population, increase the pension shortfall, and aggravate the gender imbalance.
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