More births will help solve the country's gender imbalance caused by some couples from rural areas ensuring their only child is a boy, Mei Zhiqiang, the deputy director of the Family Planning Commission in northern Shanxi province said.
"We should make sure our policy and system allows our children to give birth to two children... And they must have two children," Mei was quoted as saying to the official media here.
"Government must implant two child policy to have more young people balancing the growing number of old people," an official said.
China should further relax its one-child policy and all couples should have two babies if it is to solve problems including its ageing population.
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Some lauded Mei's suggestion, calling it an assertive way to rectify the maladjusted demographic structure.Others sniffed at it, criticising it as another compulsory policy, state-run Global Times said.
However, the side effects are affecting Chinese society, as its aged population increases out of proportion to the young, and the gender ratio becomes severely unbalanced, it said.
The government announced it was relaxing the one-child policy in 2013 to allow couples to have more than one baby if one parent was an only child.
Officials said about one million couples had applied to have a second child since the reforms were introduced.
The figure is expected to surge to 221 million in 2015, including 51 million "empty nesters," or elderly people whose children no longer live with them, which makes it incumbent on the part government to improve their social security management involving large amount of funds.
The old policy restricted most of the urban couples to have one child and most rural couples to two children, if the first child born was a girl.