New | China's two-child policy 'too little, too late' demographers warn
China's new policy to allow couples to have two children makes little difference to Peng Yajun. The Guangdong office worker, 36 and soon to be married, wants only one child as any more would be too expensive.
"I'm an only child, I cannot afford school fees for two children and the cost of taking care of my ageing parents," she sighed.
The National Health and Family Planning Commission on Friday said the two-child policy would help cope with an ageing population and weakening traditional family support.
The commission said about 90 million couples would be eligible and the peak number of births a year would rise to 20 million, from 16.87 million in 2014. It expected the labour force - those aged from 15 to 59 years - to rise by 30 million by 2050.
It expected the population to rise to 1.45 billion by 2030, from 1.37 billion last year.
But experts said this would not be enough to reverse the rapid ageing of the population.