-
Trump weighs military option to acquire Greenland
-
Talks on Ukraine guarantees to continue after Paris 'progress'
-
AI, outdated visuals fuel misinformation after Maduro capture
-
John Harbaugh fired by Ravens after 18 seasons
-
Jays and Astros hope to match Dodgers' Japan success
-
Under-fire Frank claims support of Tottenham hierarchy
-
Fletcher asked for Ferguson's advice before taking Man Utd interim role
-
Juventus bounce back in Serie A as Roma, Como in Champions League hunt
-
New Venezuela leader says 'no foreign power' running country
-
NBA Bulls sign Japanese guard Kawamura
-
Rubio was called a sell-out, then he won on Venezuela
-
Relief mixed with fear as Venezuelans cross into Colombia
-
Nine dead in clashes between Syria govt, Kurdish forces in Aleppo
-
Forest boost survival bid to leave West Ham in turmoil
-
Boulbina stunner takes Algeria through, Diallo sparkles for I. Coast
-
Trump considering military options to acquire Greenland
-
Diallo stars as Ivory Coast set up Egypt showdown in AFCON
-
Teen killed in anti-conscription protest in Jerusalem
-
Diallo stars as Ivory Coast set up Egyptsh owdown in AFCON
-
Black Caps go spin heavy for T20 World Cup campaign
-
Brazil oil drilling near Amazon halted over 'fluid leak'
-
Western allies agree Ukraine guarantees after Paris 'progress'
-
DR Congo's human statue becomes AFCON's most famous fan
-
Domen Prevc soars to Four Hills ski jump title to emulate brother
-
Boulbina extra-time stunner takes Algeria through to AFCON quarter-finals
-
Doncic, Giannis lead NBA All-Star voting
-
NASCAR commissioner Phelps steps down
-
Man Utd coaching job beyond 'wildest dreams', says Fletcher
-
Domen Prevc secures Four Hills ski jump title to emulate brother
-
Fletcher says Man Utd coaching job was not in 'wildest dreams'
-
US forces killed 55 Venezuelan, Cuban military personnel in Maduro raid: tolls
-
Maduro lawyer previously defended WikiLeaks' Julian Assange
-
O'Neill not sure he has 'energy' for long Celtic stay
-
Como sweep past Pisa to go fourth in Serie A
-
Iran security forces use tear gas in Tehran bazaar as toll rises
-
Man Utd speculation 'wasted time', says Palace boss Glasner
-
Somalia calls Israeli FM visit to Somaliland an 'incursion'
-
New Venezuelan leader walks tightrope with US, Maduro loyalists
-
US Capitol riot anniversary exposes a country still divided
-
Six dead in weather accidents as cold snap grips Europe
-
Repeating Super Cup success will give Barca 'energy': Flick
-
Dias, Gvardiol sidelined as Man City face defensive crisis
-
Newcastle's Howe rules himself out of Man Utd job
-
Five dead in weather accidents as cold snap grips Europe
-
US would lead Ukraine ceasefire monitoring, back multinational force: draft statement
-
Malaysia ex-PM Mahathir's hip injury 'serious but not dangerous': daughter
-
UK electric car sales hit record high in 2025: industry
-
Hungarian filmmaker Bela Tarr dies aged 70
-
Canadian Gee joins Lidl-Trek, resolves dispute with ex-team
-
'Demon' drags hosts Australia into United Cup quarters
'Not about condoms': Chinese shrug off contraceptive tax
China has made condoms and other contraceptives more expensive as it tries to boost birth rates, but residents in Beijing and analysts say the measure will have little impact.
Consumers must now pay a 13 percent value-added tax for contraception including condoms, after Beijing removed exemptions on the products from January 1.
Childcare and marriage brokerage services are exempt.
The government has sought to boost China's flagging birth rate, concerned about the rapidly ageing and shrinking population, as well as record low marriage rates.
But young people in Beijing told AFP that taxing contraceptives will not address the root issues they say are stopping people from having children.
"The immense pressure on young people in China today -- from employment to daily life -- has absolutely nothing to do with condoms," a resident in her thirties, who wanted to be known only as Jessica, told AFP.
Jessica said there was a notable class divide in Chinese society and many people felt their future was too uncertain to start a family.
"The rich are too rich, and the poor remain poor... (and people) lack confidence in their future, so they may be unwilling to have children."
Xu Wanting, 33, who read about the new tax online, said she did not believe it would directly increase birth rates.
"Those who truly need to buy these products will still buy them, because these are family planning products," Xu told AFP outside a shopping mall.
"They (condoms) are not solely for contraception, but also concern women's reproductive health."
- Concrete obstacles -
China's population has declined for three straight years, and could fall from 1.4 billion today to 633 million by 2100, according to United Nations predictions.
China's leaders, including President Xi Jinping, have pledged to address the country's demographic problems.
They vowed at a key economic policy meeting in December to "advocate positive views on marriage and childbearing, and strive to stabilise the number of new births" in 2026, according to state broadcaster CCTV.
But the contraceptives tax is trivial compared to the true cost of raising a child in China, one of the world's most expensive countries for child-rearing, said Alfred Wu, associate professor at the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy in Singapore.
"Young couples deciding whether to have children are not calculating whether they can afford extra dollars for contraception -- they are asking whether they can afford to raise a child at all in an environment of economic uncertainty," Wu told AFP.
They face concrete obstacles in China, Wu added, such as a weak job market, "prohibitive" housing costs, a stressful work culture and workplace discrimination against women.
A 19-year-old student surnamed Du told AFP in Beijing she felt the impact of more expensive contraceptives would be limited.
To really boost births, small companies have to guarantee benefits like marriage and maternity leave first, Du said.
Otherwise, it may be hard to convince couples to have children.
"Young people today... worry about whether they can shoulder the responsibilities of being parents," she said.
A.Williams--AT