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One Child: The Story of China's Most Radical Experiment Hardcover – January 5, 2016
When Communist Party leaders adopted the one-child policy in 1980, they hoped curbing birth-rates would help lift China’s poorest and increase the country’s global stature. But at what cost? Now, as China closes the book on the policy after more than three decades, it faces a population grown too old and too male, with a vastly diminished supply of young workers.
Mei Fong has spent years documenting the policy’s repercussions on every sector of Chinese society. In One Child, she explores its true human impact, traveling across China to meet the people who live with its consequences. Their stories reveal a dystopian reality: unauthorized second children ignored by the state, only-children supporting aging parents and grandparents on their own, villages teeming with ineligible bachelors, and an ungoverned adoption market stretching across the globe. Fong tackles questions that have major implications for China’s future: whether its “Little Emperor” cohort will make for an entitled or risk-averse generation; how China will manage to support itself when one in every four people is over sixty-five years old; and above all, how much the one-child policy may end up hindering China’s growth.
Weaving in Fong’s reflections on striving to become a mother herself, One Child offers a nuanced and candid report from the extremes of family planning.
- Print length272 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherMariner Books
- Publication dateJanuary 5, 2016
- Dimensions6 x 0.93 x 9 inches
- ISBN-10054427539X
- ISBN-13978-0544275393
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Editorial Reviews
Review
Honorable Mention, ASJA 2017 Writing Awards "A searing, important, and eminently readable exploration of China's one-child policy." — NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF, NEW YORK REVIEW OF BOOKS “The policy itself remains a monument to official callousness, and Fong’s book pays moving testimony to the suffering and forbearance of its victims.” — NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW "Not to be missed ... [Fong] combines tough, broad economic analysis with individual stories." — ECONOMIST / 1843 “A timely, important work that takes stock of the one-child policy’s damage…ONE CHILD is, like the policy’s abolition, long overdue, and Ms. Fong was the perfect person to write it.” — WALL STREET JOURNAL “Fong’s fine book is a moving and at times harrowing account of the significance of decisions taken by a small coterie of men with too much faith in science and ideology, and too little in humanity.” — GUARDIAN “Fong writes eloquently and with an authority that reflects her knowledge of many cultures ... A deeply moving account of a policy that looks set to haunt China (and the world) for decades.” — INDEPENDENT (UK) “With impeccable timing, [Fong's] new book offers a superb overview... Fong writes in an easy, accessible style, and in 200 pages takes us behind the scenes of the Sichuan earthquake, the Olympic stadium in Beijing, the dancing grannies, the migrant workers, the orphanages, the transnational adoption of Chinese baby girls, birth tourism, and surrogacy. She fills in the background to these familiar subjects with impressive research and interviews, conducted over many years.” — LOS ANGELES REVIEW OF BOOKS "Fong excels in telling the personal stories of others, providing the reader with insight into how an Orwellian policy, rarely understood by outsiders, has played out in the lives of over a billion people." — MS. “The country's one-child policy, to be officially phased out in 2016, created more far-reaching social distortions than even its most vociferous critics realized, argues Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Fong in this timely exposé of a reproductive regime whose inner workings Chinese officials have tried hard to keep under wraps… Finished just before the announcement of the policy's demise, One Child is a touching and captivating anthropological investigation of one of the most invasive laws ever devised.” — KIRKUS REVIEWS "Timely ... Compassionate ... Fong illumines individual grief and dignity ... [Her] human-scale portrayal of individual stories, weaving in her own fraught journey toward motherhood as well, makes for an approachable and edifying treatment." — LIBRARY JOURNAL “Mei Fong’s brilliant exploration of China’s one-child policy must change the way we talk about China’s rise. One Child is lucid, humane, and unflinching; it is vital reading for anyone focused on the future of China’s economy, its environment, or its politics. It not only clarifies facts and retires myths, but also confronts the deepest questions about the meaning of parenthood.” — EVAN OSNOS, National Book Award-winning author of Age of Ambition “Eye-opening, powerful, and utterly gripping, One Child had me hooked from page one. Mei Fong possesses a rare eye —
From the Back Cover
“One Child is a critically important book about a major force that has shaped contemporary China, necessary reading both for policy experts and anyone interested in the future of one of the world’s most important nations. But it is also a riveting read, written with the flair and compassion of a novel, that throws new light on the tough decisions we all face—and the joys we discover—in family life.” —ANNE-MARIE SLAUGHTER, author of Unfinished Business
“Mei Fong reveals the dark underbelly of China’s one-child policy. Whatever the original intentions, its implementation led to heartache, human rights abuses, and coercion of women across the country. Also poignant is the fact that the legacy of the State’s attempt to control reproductive rights may linger as an Achilles heel derailing its economic rise.” —PAUL FRENCH, author of Midnight in Peking
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
In the midst of the Cold War, China's rocket scientists came up with an ambitious plan that had nothing to do with missiles, or space exploration, or weaponry of any kind.
It concerned babies.
On September 25, 1980, China's Communist Party unveiled this plan through an open letter that asked members to voluntarily limit their family size to one child. The request was, in truth, an order.
Thus began the one-child policy, the world's most radical social experiment, which continues to irrevocably shape how one in six people in this world are born, live, and die.
Like crash dieting, the one-child policy was begun for reasons that had merit. China's leadership argued the policy was a necessary step in its Herculean efforts to lift a population the size of the United States' from abject poverty. But like crash dieting, the one-child policy employed radical means and aimed for quick results, causing a rash of negative side effects.
The excesses of the one-child policy, such as forced sterilizations and abortions, would eventually meet with global opprobrium. Balanced against this, however, is the world's grudging admiration for China's soaring economic growth, a success partially credited to the one-child policy.
What we fail to understand is that China's rapid economic growth has had little to do with its population-planning curbs. Indeed, the policy is imperiling future growth because it is rapidly creating a population that is too old, too male, and, quite possibly, too few.
More people, not less, was one of the reasons for China's boom. The country's rise as a manufacturing powerhouse could not have happened without abundant cheap labor from workers born during the 1960s'70s baby boom, before the one-child policy was conceived.
To be sure, fewer births made investments in human capital more efficient'''less spreading out of educational resources, for example. Many economists, however, agree that China's rapid economic rise had more to do with Beijing's moves to encourage foreign investment and private entrepreneurship than a quota on babies. Privatizing China's lumbering state-owned enterprises, for example, spurred private-sector growth until it accounted for as much as 70 percent of China's gross domestic product (GDP) by 2005. Arthur Kroeber, one of the most prolific and respected economists who specializes in China, said, 'Let's say China grew 10%; I would be surprised if more than 0.1% of this is due to the one-child policy."
China's vast cohort of workers is growing old. By 2050, one out of every four people in China will be over sixty-five. And the one-child policy has vastly shrunk the working population that must support and succor this aging army. In recent years China has made great strides in rolling out nationwide pension and health-care schemes, but the social safety net is far from adequate, and the leadership will have to do much more with much less time.
I started reporting on China's economic miracle in 2003 as a Wall Street Journal correspondent. I was on the factory beat, covering the workshop of the world. Every little city in southern China's Pearl River Delta defined itself by what it made: I made regular stops at Jeans City, Bra Town, and Dollar Store center, wrote stories about the world's largest Christmas tree factory, and about a brassiere laboratory that birthed the Wonderbra.
Few envisioned a worker shortage then. But I was starting to hear stories about factory owners being forced to hike wages. Some resorted to offering previously unheard-of perks like TVs, badminton courts, and free condoms. Most economists at the time saw it as a short-term labor supply issue that would soon sort itself out. For how could you run out of workers in China?
As it turned out, the work force shrinkage happened faster than anticipated. The one-child policy sharply accelerated a drop in fertility. China's massive 800-million-person work force'''larger than Europe's population'''started to contract in 2012 and will continue doing so for years to come, driving up wages and contributing to global inflationary pressures.
After twenty years of below-replacement rates, China is taking baby steps to encourage more couples to have two children to ease demographic pressures. So far, it doesn't appear to be working. Only about a tenth of eligible couples applied for permission to have a second child one year after Beijing introduced its most recent nationwide round of changes, a take-up below even the most pessimistic projections. Many say it's simply too costly and stressful to raise multiple offspring in modern-day China. In that sense, the one-child policy can be judged a success, for many Chinese have thoroughly internalized the mindset that the one-child household is the ideal.
If Beijing is unable to reverse this thinking, then somewhere in the decade between 2020 and 2030, China's population will peak and decline. By 2100, China's population may have declined to 1950 levels, about 500 million, a startling reversal for the world's most populous nation. No other country has ever shed this much of its population without the aid of warfare or pestilence. And at the same time, the policy's enforcement has occasionally been vicious, bordering on inhumane in certain cases, and it has encouraged a number of baleful side effects, from a potentially explosive gender imbalance to what is essentially a black market for adoptable infants.
China's one-child policy was crafted by military scientists, who believed any regrettable side effects could be swiftly mitigated and women's fertility rates easily adjusted. China's economists, sociologists, and demographers, who might have injected more wisdom and balance, were largely left out of the decision making, as the Cultural Revolution had starved social scientists of resources and prestige. Only the nation's defense scientists were untouched by the purges, and they proved not the best judges of human behavior.
The sad truth is, the harsh strictures put in place by the one-child policy were unnecessary for economic prosperity. By the 1970s, a full decade before the policy, China already had in place a highly effective and less coercive family-planning policy, called the 'Later, Longer, Fewer' campaign. In the ten years the Later, Longer, Fewer campaign was in place, women in China went from having six children on average to three.
Many demographers believed this pattern of falling fertility would have continued without the imposition of the one-child policy, a reasonable assumption considering similar fertility trajectories among neighboring Asian nations. After all, China's neighbors also managed to slow population growth'''and turbocharge their economies in the bargain'''without resorting to such traumatic measures. In roughly the same period of time China's one-child policy was in place, birthrates in South Korea, Taiwan, Singapore, and Thailand also plummeted, from six births per woman to two or fewer.
It is possible that if China had followed the path of these countries, investing in normal family-planning activities, fertility would be almost as low as current levels.
Certainly its people would be happier. "Even an extra 50 to 100 million people wouldn't have made a huge difference," suggested University of Washington professor William Lavely, an expert on China's fertility transition. "It wouldn't have greatly reduced overall welfare, and in fact it may well have increased it, as many families would have been able to have the second child they need. Higher GDP per capita can't substitute for the security and psychic benefits that some families gain from an extra child."
Will China be able to flip the baby switch on as successfully as it turned it off? Recent history suggests not.
Product details
- Publisher : Mariner Books (January 5, 2016)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 272 pages
- ISBN-10 : 054427539X
- ISBN-13 : 978-0544275393
- Item Weight : 1 pounds
- Dimensions : 6 x 0.93 x 9 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,306,973 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #277 in Demography Studies
- #1,577 in Asian Politics
- #2,120 in Chinese History (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Pulitzer-prize winning journalist and author Mei Fong covered Asia for many years as a Wall Street Journal correspondent and was recently named a Top 50 influencer on US-China relations by Foreign Policy magazine. Her first book, on China’s one-child policy, debuted in 2016 to critical acclaim from New York Times, Guardian, Independent, Ms., The Times of London and Telegraph. One Child was chosen as one of 2016’s top 10 non-fiction books by Zocalo, Medium’s Best Human Rights Books of 2016 and is recommended reading by Council of Foreign Relations, TED, and the Economist magazine’s lifestyle and ideas publication, 1843, and was also winner of a non-fiction award by the American Society of Journalists and Authors. Mei is a fellow at the DC-based thinktank New America.
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Customers find the book informative, well-researched, and fascinating. They describe it as an engaging read with personal stories. Readers praise the writing quality as well-written and journalistic.
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Customers find the book informative, well-researched, and fascinating. They say it provides excellent coverage of the topics and questions.
"...It also raises troubling questions about the global phenomenon of rising infertility and the (lack of?)..." Read more
"Very interesting review of a policy that got world attention...." Read more
"...There are so many connections to recent world social policies, population changes, and social dynamics that no one could have foreseen...." Read more
"...book, One Child: The Story of China’s Most Radical Experiment, offers an interesting, informative and comprehensive look at the history, the impact,..." Read more
Customers find the book fascinating, informative, and engaging. They appreciate the personal stories and the author's bravery. Readers also say the book weaves together personal stories, history, public policy, and tragedy.
"...However, this well-written, tenderly provoking book about China’s one-child system and it’s effects on both the nation and the individual was both..." Read more
"Excellent book. Interesting and shows exactly how a government can destroy its own society. America is on the same path...." Read more
"...This book was an excellent read.The exploration of the many repercussions of China's one child policy was informative and engaging...." Read more
"...This book was so interesting and it opened my eyes to what people in China were going through and what it really means to have the government make a..." Read more
Customers find the book well-written, with a journalist's eye and human heart. They also say it's masterfully reported and written.
"...However, this well-written, tenderly provoking book about China’s one-child system and it’s effects on both the nation and the individual was both..." Read more
"...We are lucky Mei chose to use her incredible journalistic writing talent and years of experience in China to cover an issue we'll all be impacted by..." Read more
"...But it was so well written and the personal stories made this book so worth reading. Very enlightening...." Read more
"Well written non-fiction and kept my attention. Some sections I could not stop reading...." Read more
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Top reviews from the United States
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I soon borrowed the book; my wife hasn't seen it since Christmas Day. I learned much. Clearly, Fong's access to China and her language fluency allowed her to share insights that would elude journalists without these qualities. Yet, none of the insights were novel, and I was disappointed with both her bias against China and her celebration of the suffering of rural poor who happened to be male.
The anti-China bias manifested in (what seemed to me clumsy) attempts to find lessons about the one-child policy in the 2008 Sichuan earthquake, and the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing -- both of which were painted in a very unfavorable light, with carefully chosen examples to highlight the horrors of modern China. While no doubt the response to natural disasters and the hosting of a global event reveal something about China worth knowing, these events don't seem the most natural flash-points for discussion of reproductive policy. It seemed more like an excuse to bash the CCP. Don't get me wrong. I'm not a stooge for communists. But such criticism seemed tangential and distracting in a book about reproductive policy, specifically. To put it a little differently, tracing the impact of the one-child policy on the 2008 olympics is like trying to understand Brown v. Board through the 1996 games in Atlanta, Georgia. Maybe there's something there, but I wouldn't start a book about desegregation that way.
As to the hardships of the rural, male poor, the insensitivity of the author almost brought tears to my eyes and nearly prevented me from continuing. Fong described how some young men in an agricultural community were lured into marriage by scammers. Because of the reverse-dowry system in China, the parents of the boys had to take out loans they might have to work decades to repay. The women vanished with the money, leaving the families in financial ruin and new husbands humiliated and heartbroken. Fong wrote something to the effect that this was something of a victory for women in a country that had oppressed them. I couldn't help but think of my students in China, their parents, and the hardships they endure. To celebrate their suffering in the name of feminism seems as perverse as celebrating forced abortions in the name of patriarchy.
Again, I learned much. But I would hesitate to lean too much on this reporting in building up an understanding of China.
Book with a Number in the Title.
I grabbed this in the Kindle Bookstore a few months ago after reading the title. I thought an in-depth examination in China's One Child policy to be really interesting and this book did not disappoint.
In one light, the policy was a success. Despite the fact that this is no longer state policy, parents in China now are choosing to have one child families despite the recent returned freedom to have more. Now India while likely surpass China as the most populous country in the next two decades.
Meanwhile, the side effects of over three decades of this policy include a massive bride shortage, a quickly disappearing work force, and an exploding retiree population. Amongst other interesting impacts addressed were bride payments, baby trafficking for adoptions, the massive in vitro fertilization industry there and international surrogates.
The author is a former correspondent for the Wall Street Journal and does a great job here taking us inside another society. A great read for those who like books on sociology and world culture.
Top reviews from other countries
I was clearly naive, less read and an ignorant fool. The policy is absolutely draconian and far reaching consequences were never thought of.
Read this book to know more about the horrifying tales of the people who are subjected to this draconian law.
Would reccomend to anyone leaving / dealing with China as it helps understanding the society much better.

