
China unveils child care subsidies in push to boost fertility
The high cost of child care and education as well as job uncertainty and a slowing economy are among the concerns that have discouraged many young Chinese from getting married and starting a family.
Subsidies will start from this year, with partial subsidies for children under 3 born prior to 2025, in a policy expected to benefit more than 20 million families of toddlers and infants, the official Xinhua news agency said.
The plan is an 'important national livelihood policy' and direct cash subsidies will help 'reduce the cost of family childbirth and parenting,' the National Health Commission said.
Demographers and economists said while the move was positive, the amount was likely too small to incentivize people to have children.
China's population fell for a third consecutive year in 2024, with experts warning of a worsening downturn, after decades of falling birth rates following a one-child policy adopted from 1980 to 2015, coupled with rapid urbanization.
In the past two years provinces nationwide have started handing out child care subsidies in amounts that vary considerably, from 1,000 yuan a child to up to 100,000 yuan, including housing subsidies.
The central government will fund the new national policy instead of local authorities, Xinhua said. Authorities are expected to announce more details on Wednesday.
Zichun Huang, China economist at Capital Economics, said the sums involved were too small to have a near-term impact on the birth rate or consumption.
'But the policy does mark a major milestone in terms of direct handouts to households and could lay the groundwork for more fiscal transfers in future.'
Citi Research estimates a total lump-sum payout of 117 billion yuan in the second half of this year through the plan, saying the scheme is more meaningful as a consumption policy than as a population policy.
'As a population policy, it remains to be seen whether the national program can move the needle on fertility rate,' the research house said in a note.
Authorities in China unfurled a series of 'fertility friendly' measures in 2024 to tackle the coming decade's challenge of the entry into retirement of roughly 300 million people, equivalent to almost the entire U.S. population.
Demographer Emma Zang, a professor at Yale University, said a nationwide scheme might offer some coordination and signal greater central commitment, but called for greater efforts.
'Without sustained structural investment in areas like affordable child care, parental leave, and job protections for women, the effect on fertility is likely to remain minimal,' she added.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Business Insider
34 minutes ago
- Business Insider
Nvidia Stock (NVDA) Trembles as Chinese Ramp Up Pressure on Chip Security Fears
Nvidia (NVDA) stock dropped 2% today as a war of words over security risks erupted between it and Chinese authorities. Elevate Your Investing Strategy: Take advantage of TipRanks Premium at 50% off! Unlock powerful investing tools, advanced data, and expert analyst insights to help you invest with confidence. Security Proofs The semiconductor giant was warned that it must produce 'convincing security proofs' to eliminate Chinese users' worries over security risks in its chips and 'regain market trust.' That is according to a commentary published in China's state-run media People's Daily. Foreign companies must comply with Chinese laws and take security to be a basic prerequisite; the commentary said. It comes 24 hours after The Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC) summoned Nvidia to explain 'backdoor security risks' of its H20 chips sold in China and submit relevant documents. The move is reportedly aimed at 'safeguarding the network and data security of Chinese users' after comments from American AI experts suggested that Nvidia's chips have location tracking and can remotely shut down the technology. It is not clear who these experts are and if China has undertaken its own tests into the chips. Nvidia came out fighting telling Reuters that: 'Cybersecurity is critically important to us. NVIDIA does not have 'backdoors' in our chips that would give anyone a remote way to access or control them.' It is understood that company representatives have already been interviewed by the CAC. It comes at an important time for Nvidia and its relationship with China, which is a key part of its overall revenues. China Crisis Earlier this month, Nvidia said that it could resume its H20 AI chip sales in China, months after the U.S. Commerce Department put export restrictions on the chips amid ramped-up U.S.-China tariff trade tensions. Nvidia estimated that the ban had cost it a huge $15 billion in lost sales. The chip was specially designed for Chinese customers to meet U.S. export rules and has been a top seller in the country since 2024. Nvidia has also introduced a new AI chip for China. The model is designed for use in factory automation and logistics and is built on the company's advanced Blackwell architecture. If security fears are confirmed, then this could have a detrimental impact on the Nvidia share price which has performed well this year. In 2023, the CAC said products from semiconductor group Micron Technology (MU), failed a national security review, resulting in a sales ban of its products to key infrastructure operators in China. Is NVDA a Good Stock to Buy Now? On TipRanks, NVDA has a Strong Buy consensus based on 34 Buy, 3 Hold and 1 Sell ratings. Its highest price target is $250. NVDA stock's consensus price target is $185.79, implying a 4.45% upside.


Axios
6 hours ago
- Axios
Sales tax holidays begin as families face higher school costs
Nine states are kicking off tax-free holidays this weekend —as back-to-school inflation hits hard and families rush to lock in savings. Why it matters: It's a rare tax break for families preparing for a new school year and dealing with higher prices because of President Trump's tariffs. Four states — Alabama, Mississippi, New Mexico and Tennessee — held tax holidays in July, and four more tax-free breaks are held later in August. The big picture: Retailers like Walmart and Target are freezing or lowering prices on select items to court budget-conscious shoppers. Looming tariffs on Chinese imports — including tech and school supplies — are expected to drive prices up 12–15% this season, according to retail analysts. What they're saying:"With uncertainty around costs this fall, both shoppers and retailers are trying to lock in value now while they can," Stephanie Carls, RetailMeNot retail insights expert, told Axios. Mary Hines Droesch, head of consumer and wealth management products at Bank of America, tells Axios, that spreading out purchases can help consumers avoid impulse buys and lets families catch late-season deals. Sales tax holidays 2025 include online orders Sales tax is waived for in-store purchases and online shopping during the holidays, but exclusions apply. Arkansas tax-free weekend 2025 Arkansas holds its annual sales tax holiday on the first weekend of August each year for two days — Saturday and Sunday. Tax-free items: Clothing and shoes: Less than $100 per item. Clothing accessories or equipment: Less than $50 per item. School supplies and electronic devices used by students for study are also included, the state said. Florida sales tax holiday 2025 The Sunshine State's annual sales tax holiday is now a monthlong tax break every August. Tax-free items: Clothing, footwear and accessories: $100 or less. Most school supplies: $50 or less. Computers and accessories for personal use: $1,500 or less. Learning aids and jigsaw puzzles: $30 or less. Iowa sales tax holiday weekend 2025 The Hawkeye State's tax holiday is held annually on the first weekend in August and lasts two days, Friday and Saturday. No state or local option sales tax will be collected on clothing or footwear less than $100, according to the state. Missouri tax-free weekend 2025 Missouri's annual three-day tax holiday runs Friday through Sunday, Aug. 3, per the state. Tax-free items: Clothing: $100 or less. Personal computers and computer peripheral devices: Up to $1,500 and software up to $350. School supplies: Not to exceed $50 per purchase, graphing calculators up to $150. Ohio expanded sales tax holiday 2025 Ohio expanded its annual sales tax holiday into a two-week event, which ends at 11:59pm Aug. 14. The sales tax holiday includes "all tangible personal property that is $500 or less," including electronics, clothing, books, home goods, sporting goods, food and more. Oklahoma sales tax holiday 2025 Oklahoma's three-day sales tax holiday is held the first Friday through Sunday in August annually. Tax-free items: Clothing and footwear: Less than $100. South Carolina tax-free weekend 2025 The annual sales tax holiday in South Carolina is Friday through Sunday, Aug. 3 and exempts eligible purchases from the 6% state tax and local taxes. Tax-free items: Regardless of price, all computers, printers, school supplies, clothing and accessories, shoes and certain bed and bath items. Virginia sales tax holiday 2025 Virginia's three-day sales tax holiday — Friday through Sunday — waives tax on school supplies, clothing, footwear, emergency preparedness items as well as select appliances. Tax-free items: Clothing and footwear: $100 or less per item. School supplies: $20 or less. West Virginia sales tax holiday 2025 West Virginia's sales tax holiday runs Friday through 11:59 p.m. on Monday, Aug. 4, the state says. Tax-free items: Clothing: $125 or less. Laptop and tablet computers: $500 or less. School supplies: $50 or less. School instruction material: $20 or less. Sports equipment: $150 or less. Upcoming sales tax holidays

Epoch Times
6 hours ago
- Epoch Times
Canada Renews Funding for China Student Exchange Program That Requires Allegiance to Communist Regime
Canada has renewed funding for a bilateral scholarship program that requires Chinese candidates applying to study in Canada to show allegiance to the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and uphold the party's 'socialist system.' David Morrison, deputy minister of foreign affairs at Global Affairs Canada, on July 30 signed an agreement with his Chinese counterpart, executive vice minister Ma Zhaoxu, to renew the Canada-China Scholars' Exchange Program. Through the program, Ottawa funds Chinese applicants to conduct research at Canadian universities as visiting scholars for 4–12 months.