Wednesday 8 December 2010

China's anti-natal, one child policy.

China’s one child policy has plenty of positive and negative aspects to it. In 1970 the average women had 6 children in China, now it is only two; it has prevented more than 250 million births in the country. To encourage the population to only have one child they have come up with incentives such as the one-child certificate. They will get other surpluses such as; an extra month’s wages until the child is 14, also they are giving interest free loans, retirement funds are boosted, better housing and healthcare and finally priority to school enrolment. The country has had great success with the policy, especially as only 37.5% of the population are under it excluding cities like Hong Kong.
Some of the negatives that have been perceived from the one child policy are people cheating the system. Some children are shuffled to live with relatives and their surnames are just simply changed, resulting in an estimated 6 million undocumented children. Moreover this in May 2007 riots broke out in Bobai and Shabei , between 300 and 3000 people participated in the demonstrations.  Furthermore in the 1980s there were rumours that human rights had been breached, some extreme cases torture had been reported.
I think that the once child policy has had a great success in China in helping reduce the population, however I believe that despite them not reviewing the policy until 2050 they should investigate it sooner. Because I believe that if they let the policy continue for too long than they may suffer from an ageing population.

Sunday 21 November 2010

Ageing Population and the effects

In the UK it is predicted that in 2050 the population of the people aged 65 and over will have almost doubled. Also the government have predicted that the predicted average male life expectancy at 65 will rise to 21.0 in 2030 and 21.7 by 2050. Christchurch in Dorset is known to be the “pensioners” capital of England, one in three of them being retirement age. This is because pensioners usually migrate to coastal areas or by the sea side. 

United Kingdom's population pyramid for 2050.

The impacts of this are things such as healthcare, the higher the population of older people the more cost needed for the healthcare with things that are wrong with them, therefore the health costs are compressed into the later year of lives.  This process is called compression of morbidity. Not only this but other impacts that this has is on retired people’s pensions. Because of more of the population being retired it requires more money to be paid into pensions, as they may not be enough younger people to afford to pay for it. There has, however been some suggestions made to prevent this from happening such as; pensioners become poorer , taxes and national insurance contributions go up, rate that people save for retirement increases or the average age of retirement go up. A final impact of all this is that more housing is required for older people. They need specialist homes such as bungalows where access to other rooms isn’t a problem. Other things that will be in higher demand will be nursing homes; a further knock onto this is the need for more people to work within these homes.

In England it is said that councils will struggle with ageing population, at the moment 9 billion pound is spent a year on council care. It is predicted that by 2026 it will double.

Monday 8 November 2010

Less child deaths, less overpopulation

It is said that 500,000 kids die every year from a diarrhoeal disease; however this has been unnoticed by the public. But if something could be done about this and more children’s lives could be saved than it could result in less overpopulation. The result of overpopulation is the need of more money, the more money needed the harder it is to spread the resources of sanitation, food and clothes. It is believed that most parents in less economically developed countries only want small families, but the problem arises when the mother isn’t confident that all of her children will make it, so she has to have twice as many. But when she knows that her first few children will survive she can invest more money in her family. A new organisation has recently been put together to spread our vaccines to the very poorest countries in the world. This organisation is called GAVI (the global alliance for vaccines and immunisation). Since 1980 measles has gone down by a staggering 93 per cent!

Check out gavi's support group on facebook!
http://www.facebook.com/GAVIAlliance?v=wall#!/GAVIAlliance

Saturday 11 September 2010

Pakistan flood continues to have devastating effects on lives.

After fasting from Ramadan finished celebrations were supposed to be carried out, however the effect of the floods still carries misery for a lot of people in Pakistan. It started nearly 6 weeks ago and is the worst floods Pakistan have ever seen! It killed more than 1750 people and caused 43 billion US dollars worth of damage. Although the floods have come to a near finish and water levels are lowering, citizens in Pakistan are still living in camps because their houses have been destroyed and livelihood has been lost. Leaving friends and family lost across the nation. Not only this, but the prolonged affects are that millions of children could carry diseases, causing more financial strain on the nation and possibly increasing the death toll for this awful natural disaster. This shows how devastating floods can be and how they can destroy lives, but it also shows how lucky people in Boscastle were in 2004, after no life was lost in their devastating floods.