Houston Community News >> Race to Have an Olympic Baby
10/20/2007 Beijing-- Which baby
will be the one whose cry will herald the 2008 Beijing Olympics? Ask their
prospective parents – right now.
For many Chinese couples, October is the right season to conceive babies, as
they hope to have an “Olympic baby” delivered at 8.08pm, on Aug 8, 2008, the
time when the opening ceremony will begin.
“Hosting the Olympic Games is a once in a blue moon chance,” says a father-to-be
surnamed Li in Guangzhou, the capital of South China’s Guangdong Province. “If
my wife is lucky enough to deliver an ‘Olympic baby’, the luck means something
more than family joy.”
Li and his wife, two civil servants in Guangzhou, didn’t battle the crowds of
holidaymakers during the weeklong National Day holiday. Instead, like many other
young couples, they chose to stay at home, trying to get their timing right and
have a baby born on Aug 8.
“Even though I was off-duty, the past holiday was never carefree,” complained
Tao Lili, a renowned maternity doctor in Guangzhou.
She constantly received calls for counselling on in vitro fertilisation in this
period or on selective births for 2008.
While the ambitious potential parents plan to celebrate the Games with a new
addition to their families, host country China is bracing itself for a baby
boom.
The first generation born under the one-child policy has reached the age of
childbearing. And also, a mixture of traditional superstition and new trends has
led to an abnormal surge in the population.
The year 2000 saw over 36 million “millennium babies”, nearly doubling the
number in 1999 and 2001. Seven years later, the country is witnessing a new rush
of baby deliveries since Feb 18, the beginning of the lunar New Year, the Year
of the Pig.
Many couples are trying to have “piggy babies” so that they will have a happy
and prosperous life in the Year of the Golden Pig, as the animal sign coincides
with gold, one of the five elements on earth.
As a result, the number of newborns is expected to hit 20 million this year,
according to Xinhua new agency. And with the “Olympic baby” fever, the numbers
of babies will be even higher.
The baby boom has already started to put strains on schools and hospitals and
later on, job markets. Experts warn irrational selective births could result in
a shortage of social resources.
“The birth rush will create a series of shortages starting from when babies are
born to the time when they look for jobs,” said Yu Hai, a sociology professor in
Shanghai-based Fudan University.
Last year, when “millennium babies” reached school age, schools around the
country were reportedly packed to capacity. Primary schools in Lanzhou, the
capital of Northwest China’s Gansu Province, saw a jump of enrolment numbers by
10% to 30% in 2006.
Parents who had babies in the Year of the Pig have found the procedure of having
a delivery in a good hospital or looking for nannies a frustrating ordeal, as
beds and nannies were booked in advance.
(contributed by China Daily)