China Plans to Make Cities More Youth-, Child-Friendly
By Reuters | 22 Apr, 2026
China pushes cities to integrate youth development into urban planning, housing, healthcare, education and public services.
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
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.
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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