# Vietnam scraps its 50-year two-child rule and launches a baby bonus as the birth rate falls to 1.93
> A new population law effective July 1 extends maternity leave from six to seven months for second children, adds free prenatal screenings and a cash bonus, as Vietnam faces the prospect of ageing before it reaches high-income status

**Meta:** type: event · date: 2026-07-01 · heads: The Quiet Shift, How Life Changes · 5 takes · 4 lenses · 5 regions

## Summary

Vietnam's new population law took effect July 1, 2026, introducing a package of pronatalist incentives following the formal scrapping of the two-child limit that dated back to the 1960s. Mothers having a second child now receive seven months of maternity leave (up from six), free prenatal screenings and a small cash bonus. Vietnam's total fertility rate stands at 1.93, below the 2.1 replacement level, with the shortfall concentrated in major urban centres. Government projections show the over-60 age cohort reaching 25% of the population by mid-century. GDP per capita is approximately US$5,000, far below the income levels at which Japan, South Korea and Thailand experienced comparable demographic declines, raising concerns that Vietnam will age before it achieves high-income status.

## Why it matters

Vietnam's manufacturing competitiveness depends on its young working-age population: labour-intensive industries from electronics assembly to garment production have relocated from China to Vietnam specifically because of wage and demographic advantages. If the demographic trajectory mirrors China or South Korea, Vietnam's export-led model faces a compressing window. Previous southern-city campaigns to raise birth rates produced no measurable effect, so the July 1 incentives face structural headwinds: urban housing costs, long working hours and changing social norms in Ho Chi Minh City are closer analogues to Seoul or Taipei than to rural Hanoi.

## What to watch

- Whether fertility rates in major urban centres respond to the new incentives; the government has set a 2030 review deadline.
- Whether Vietnam expands incentives further, as South Korea did with increasingly large subsidies that also failed to move the dial.
- The broader Southeast Asian trend: Thailand and the Philippines are watching Vietnam's experiment as their own rates continue to fall.

## Regional takes (batched by bias / lens)

### AFP wire carried by France24; frames the policy as part of a Southeast Asian demographic inflection point
- **France24 (AFP)** (France, en) — AFP traces the history: Vietnam's preference for two-child families dates to the 1960s, when communist authorities sought to curb population growth during the war, with an official limit adopted in 1988. Vietnam lifted the formal limit a year ago; the July 1 law adds positive incentives. The new measures add one month of maternity leave for mothers having a second child (six to seven months total), free prenatal screenings and a small cash bonus. AFP notes Vietnam's birth rate of 1.93 is robust compared to most developed nations but that the over-60 cohort will reach 25% of the population by mid-century.
  > "Vietnam's birth rate of 1.93 is below the 2.1 replacement level; the over-60 share will reach 25% by mid-century."
  Source: https://www.france24.com/en/live-news/20260701-vietnam-unveils-baby-bonus-after-scrapping-two-child-policy

### Japan-based English-language daily; specifically highlights Vietnam's demographic challenge compared to Japan's own experience
- **Japan Times** (Japan, en) — Japan Times draws the parallel between Vietnam's demographic inflection and Japan's own trajectory from the 1990s: both countries risk getting 'old before rich,' a structural trap Vietnam is trying to prevent with the new incentives. GDP per capita in Vietnam is around US$5,000, well below Japan's when its fertility decline became entrenched. The article flags that previous government campaigns to raise the birth rate in major southern cities such as Ho Chi Minh City have consistently failed, and questions whether cash incentives will work.
  > "Vietnam's concern is that it gets old before it gets rich; GDP per capita is around US$5,000, far below Japan's when its own fertility decline became entrenched."
  Source: https://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2026/07/02/asia-pacific/vietnam-baby-bonus-two-child-policy/

### US magazine; situates Vietnam within the broader Asian demographic squeeze
- **Newsweek** (United States, en) — Newsweek notes that Vietnam's reversal is part of a wider Southeast Asian shift: Indonesia, Thailand and the Philippines have also seen birth rates fall below expectations, though only South Korea, Japan and Singapore have introduced aggressive pronatalist policies. Vietnam's approach is described as comparatively modest, relying on statutory leave extensions and modest cash bonuses rather than the large-scale subsidies South Korea has deployed.
  > "Vietnam's approach is modest compared to South Korea's subsidies; birth rates are falling across Southeast Asia without comparable policy responses."
  Source: https://www.newsweek.com/vietnam-two-child-policy-birth-rates-2080941

### unlabelled
- **The Peninsula Qatar** (Qatar, en) — 
  Source: http://thepeninsulaqatar.com/article/01/07/2026/vietnam-unveils-baby-bonus-after-scrapping-two-child-policy
- **Arabella Star Magazine** (Global, en) — 
  Source: https://www.arabellastarmagazine.com/vietnam-unveils-baby-bonus-after-scrapping-two-child-policy/news/

## Across the graph
- Entities: Vietnam

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