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12/16/2004
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China's family planning does not depend on induced abortion but mainly benefit from good contraceptive measures encouraged and funded by the government. The rate of induced abortion in China was much lower than the average level worldwide, according to Chinese population experts. Though the number of induced abortions is big due to China's large population, the rate is much lower than those in Japan, the Republic of Korea and eastern European countries.
During the 1960s, the abortion rate was 5 to 7 in the former Soviet Union, Yugoslavia and Romania. In the late 1950s, the figure for Japan was 4. In the early 1980s, the rate was nearly 3 in the Republic of Korea. The abortion rate in China was 1.7 in 1983.
From 1971 to 1981, the average number of children a Chinese woman of child-bearing age would have in her life fell from 5.4 to2.72. The drop in the birthrate was influenced by many factors, with contraception the most important during this period and abortion the least important factor.
"The Chinese government calls for young women of child-bearing age to take contraceptive measures," said Chen Wei, a demographer at the Demography and Development Research Center at China's People's University.
The government also emphasized delaying marriage and pregnancy to control the country's birthrate. "China has become a nation with a low birthrate and also a low abortion rate by the end of the 20th century," Chen said, adding that the induced abortion rate fell rapidly in China with the adjustment of its family planning policy and the promotion of medical services for childbirth. (People's Daily, October 23, 2002)
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