Change to family planning policy likely to result in 1m extra babies each year
A new peak in births is likely to occur as a result of the relaxing of the family planning policy and could continue for several years, according to experts.
They estimate that the number of babies born annually will rise by more than 1 million from current levels, bringing the total number of births each year close to that recorded during the last peak.
Last year, 16.87 million babies were born in China, 470,000 more than in 2013, according to the National Bureau of Statistics.
"This is a dramatic increase compared with previous years," Yuan Xin, a professor of population studies at Nankai University in Tianjin, said.
The number of births declined steadily between 1999, when more than 18 million babies were born, and 2006.
Since then, the number of births has remained stable at less than 16.4 million, according to the bureau.
The big increase in the number of births last year was caused by a series of moves to relax the family planning restrictions, Yuan said.
Since late 2013, 29 of the 31 provincial regions on the mainland have enacted policies that allow couples to have a second baby if either partner is a single child, according to the National Health and Family Planning Commission.
About 1.07 million such couples had registered with the authorities to have a second child by the end of last year, the commission said.