Osmond Chia,Enterprise reporterand
Yan Chen,BBC Information Chinese language
Getty PhotosChinese language folks can pay a 13% gross sales tax on contraceptives from 1 January, whereas childcare companies can be exempt, because the world’s second-largest economic system tries to spice up delivery charges.
An overhaul of the tax system introduced late final yr removes many exemptions that had been in place since 1994, when China was nonetheless imposing its decades-long one-child rule.
It additionally exempts marriage-related companies and aged care from worth added tax (VAT) – a part of a broader effort that features extending parental go away and issuing money handouts.
Confronted with an ageing inhabitants and sluggish economic system, Beijing has been making an attempt arduous to encourage extra younger Chinese language folks to marry, and {couples} to have youngsters.
Official figures present that China’s inhabitants has shrunk three years in a row, with simply 9.54 million infants born in 2024. That’s round half of the variety of births recorded a decade in the past, when China began to ease its guidelines on what number of youngsters folks might have.
Nonetheless, the tax on contraceptives, together with condoms, contraception tablets and gadgets, has sparked concern about undesirable pregnancies and HIV charges, in addition to ridicule. Some folks level out that it might take much more than dear condoms to influence them to have youngsters.
As one retailer urged consumers to fill up forward of the worth hike, a social media person joked: “I am going to purchase a lifetime’s value of condoms now.”
Folks can inform the distinction between the worth of a condom and that of elevating a baby, wrote one other.
China is likely one of the costliest international locations during which to boost a baby, based on a 2024 report by the YuWa Inhabitants Analysis Institute in Beijing. Prices are pushed up by faculty charges in a extremely aggressive tutorial surroundings, and the problem girls have juggling work and parenting, the examine stated.
The financial slowdown, partly introduced on by a property disaster that has hit financial savings, has left households, and particularly younger folks, feeling unsure or much less assured about their future.
“I’ve one baby, and I do not need any extra,” says 36-year-old Daniel Luo, who lives within the jap province of Henan.
“It is like when subway fares enhance. Once they go up by a yuan or two, individuals who take the subway do not change their habits. You continue to should take the subway, proper?”
He says he isn’t involved by the worth hike. “A field of condoms may cost a little an additional 5 yuan, possibly 10, at most 20. Over a yr, that is just some hundred yuan, utterly reasonably priced.”
Getty PhotosHowever price is perhaps an issue for others, and that is what worries Rosy Zhao, who lives within the metropolis of Xi’an in central China.
She says making contraception, which is a necessity, dearer might imply college students or these struggling financially “take a threat”.
That might be the coverage’s “most harmful potential end result”, she added.
Observers seem divided on the purpose of the tax overhaul. The concept that a tax hike on condoms will impression delivery charges is “overthinking it”, says demographer Yi Fuxian from the College of Wisconsin-Madison.
He believes Beijing is eager to gather taxes “wherever it may well” because it battles a housing market stoop and rising nationwide debt.
At practically $1tn (£742bn), China’s VAT income made up near 40% of the nation’s tax assortment final yr.
The transfer to tax condoms is “symbolic” and displays Beijing’s makes an attempt to encourage folks to raise China’s “strikingly low” fertility numbers, stated Henrietta Levin from the Heart for Strategic and Worldwide Research.
What can be hampering efforts, she provides, is that quite a lot of the insurance policies and subsidies should be carried out by indebted provincial governments – and it is unclear if they’ll spare adequate sources.
China’s strategy to urging folks to have youngsters additionally dangers backfiring if folks really feel the federal government is being “too intrusive” about what’s deeply private alternative, she stated.
Just lately there have been media studies that ladies in some provinces have obtained calls from native officers asking about their menstrual cycles and plans to have youngsters. The native well being bureau in Yunnan province stated such knowledge was wanted to establish expectant moms.
However this has not helped the federal government’s picture, Ms Levin stated. “The [Communist] social gathering can not help however insert itself into each resolution that it cares about. So it finally ends up being its personal worst enemy in some methods.”
Getty PhotosObservers and girls themselves say the nation’s male-dominated management fails to grasp the social adjustments underpinning these broader shifts, which aren’t unique to China.
Nations within the West and even these within the area, comparable to South Korea and Japan, have been struggling to raise delivery charges as their inhabitants ages.
A part of the reason being the burden of childcare, which disproportionately falls on girls, analysis reveals. However there are additionally different shifts, comparable to a decline in marriage and even relationship.
China’s measures miss the true downside: the best way younger folks work together right now, which more and more avoids real human connections, Mr Luo from Henan stated.
He factors to rising gross sales of intercourse toys in China, which he believes is an indication that “persons are simply satisfying themselves” as a result of “interacting with one other individual has change into extra of a burden”.
Being on-line is less complicated and extra comforting, he says, as “the stress is actual”.
“Younger folks right now cope with far more stress from society than folks did 20 years in the past. Positive, materially they’re higher off, however the expectations positioned on them are a lot increased. Everybody’s simply exhausted.”


