China Imposes Tax on Condoms to Boost Birth Rate

By Tax assistant

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China to impose tax on condoms after 32 years amid drop in birth rates

China is set to reverse a 32-year policy by imposing a 13% Value-Added Tax (VAT) on all contraceptive items, including condoms, starting January 2026. This major shift is aimed at boosting the country’s persistently declining birth rate.

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Policy Details

  • New Tax: 13% levy under the revised Value-Added Tax Law.
  • Effective Date: January 2026.
  • Reversal: These products have been tax-free since 1993, a status granted when the government was promoting birth control under the strict one-child policy (1980–2015).
  • Official Comment: The government has not yet officially commented on the contraceptive tax specifically.

Demographic Crisis

The policy comes as China grapples with a demographic decline:

Metric2024 DataContext
PopulationDropped by 1.39 million to 1.408 billionMarks the third consecutive year of decline.
Birth Rate6.77 births per 1,000 peopleA slight increase from 6.39 in 2023, but still critically low.
Total Births9.54 millionUp from 9.02 million in 2023.

The UN further predicts a steep decline, estimating that the number of Chinese women of reproductive age (15–49) will fall to under 100 million by the end of the century.

Other Pro-Natalist Measures

The tax is part of a broader government strategy to encourage childbearing, which includes:

  • Cash rewards for newborns offered by local governments.
  • Extension of parental leave.
  • Discouraging abortions that are not considered “medically necessary.”

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