HomeAsiaChina taxes condoms, contraceptive drugs in bid to spur birth rate

China taxes condoms, contraceptive drugs in bid to spur birth rate

-

HONG KONG, Jan ​2 (Reuters) - China removed a three-decade-old tax exemption on contraceptive drugs and devices from January 1 in ⁠new steps to spur a flagging birth rate.

Condoms and contraceptive pills now incur value-added tax of 13%, ‍the standard rate for most consumer goods.

The move comes ​as Beijing struggles to boost birth rates in the world's second-largest economy. China's population fell for a third ​consecutive year in 2024 and experts have cautioned the downturn will continue.

China exempted childcare subsidies from personal income tax and rolled out an annual childcare subsidy last year, following a series of "fertility-friendly" ‌measures in 2024, such as urging colleges and ‌universities to provide "love education" to portray marriage, love, fertility and family ​in a positive light.

Top leaders again pledged last month at the annual Central Economic Work Conference to ‌promote "positive marriage and childbearing attitudes" to stabilise birth rates.     

China's birth ⁠rates have been falling for decades as ‌a result of the one-child ​policy China implemented from 1980 to 2015, and rapid urbanisation.

The high cost of childcare and education as ⁠well as job ⁠uncertainty and a slowing economy have also discouraged many ​young Chinese from getting married and starting a family.

(Reporting by Clare Jim; ‌Editing by Kate Mayberry)

tagreuters.com2026binary_LYNXMPEM0101K-VIEWIMAGE

Author

Stay Connected

1,800FansLike
259FollowersFollow
119FollowersFollow
1,263FollowersFollow
90,000SubscribersSubscribe

Related articles

Latest posts

Share on Social Media

spot_img