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China unveils plan to make cities more youth, child friendly

China unveils plan to make cities more youth, child friendly

ReutersWed, April 22, 2026 at 6:34 AM UTC

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FILE PHOTO: Children ride a snow bicycle at Shanghai L+SNOW Indoor Skiing Theme Resort amid an orange alert for heat in Shanghai, China August 28, 2025. REUTERS/Go Nakamura/File Photo

HONG KONG, April 22 (Reuters) - China has issued a new proposal urging cities to integrate youth development into urban ‌planning, housing, healthcare, education and public services, in a ‌broader push to make urban life more supportive for young people, children and families.

The ​blueprint, jointly issued by 15 departments and released on Wednesday, aims to deepen the construction of "youth-development-oriented cities," with measures spanning jobs, housing, healthcare, family support and urban services.

It comes after Beijing said in ‌March that it would ⁠build a "childbirth friendly society" from 2026-2030.

Authorities are trying to reverse China's demographic decline after official data showed ⁠births fell to 7.92 million in 2025, with the birth rate dropping to a record low. China's population fell by 3.39 million last ​year, ​the fourth consecutive annual decline.

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Measures include ​improving matchmaking and social ‌services, expanding childcare subsidies, promoting wider coverage of mother-and-baby rooms in public places, improving maternity and paediatric care, strengthening after-school and holiday childcare services, and making school access more equal for the children of migrant workers.

"By 2030, the concept of youth-development-oriented cities will be ‌widely established," the policy said, adding ​that by 2035 China aims to ​have formed a "relatively mature and ​complete system for youth development."

China also issued a ‌blueprint on high-quality urban development last ​year, aimed at ​creating more liveable cities by 2035.

The pivot comes after breakneck urban growth that once super-charged the world's second largest ​economy, as authorities shift ‌their focus from rapid growth to improving quality of ​life and stable development.

(Reporting by Farah Master and the ​Beijing newsroom; Editing by Kim Coghill)

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