One of the totemic policies of China's Communist Party - the ban on families having more than a single child - has been relaxed in a historic shift by Beijing's new ruling regime.
The decision to water down the one-child policy was taken at a summit of the party's elite leadership in the Chinese capital this week. From now on Chinese couples in which one of the parents is an only child will be permitted to have a second baby, according to documents released by the regime yesterday. The relaxation of the restriction could give an estimated 10 million Chinese women the opportunity to have a second child.
The decision follows a previous relaxation of the rules, whereby families in which the mother and the father are only children are allowed to have an extra child. But the timing of this decision, emerging from the first big policy meeting of the new administration of President Xi Jinping, imbues it with a special significance and signals a new era for China's approach to its population.
The one-child policy was introduced in 1979 at the same time as the former leader Deng Xiaoping was throwing open the doors of the country to foreign investment and dismantling Chairman Mao's command economy.
The policy was presented as a measure necessary to allow the Chinese economy to grow sustainably and to avoid the kind of social chaos the country had regularly experienced over the previous century. Chinese officials present the policy as a success, claiming it has reduced the Chinese population today, relative to where it otherwise would have been, by some 400 million.