"The cost of having children is still too high and the benefits too low," said 32-year-old Shanghai-based Aiqi, who shrugged off the state council's latest measures. She declined to give her last name for privacy reasons.
"We need to change the competitive education system, high intensity work environment and the high housing cost."
China abandoned its 35-year-old one-child policy in 2015, but it has struggled to increase the birth rate that fell to a record low last year.
And demographers do not see a significant change soon. While they expect a flurry of initiatives aimed at spurring births in the coming months, they warn that spending by indebted local governments will remain limited.
"It takes 20-years for a child to become a tax payer. Debt-ridden local governments simply have no incentive to encourage childbirth," said Yi Fuxian, a demographer at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
China's Yuwa Population Research estimates the country needs to invest 10% of GDP to stabilise the population.
Policies like those laid out last week have been helpful in countries such as France and Sweden, but they have not moved the needle in east Asia, most likely due to high gender inequality, according to demographers.
South Korea and Japan rank 46th and 59th in the World Economic Forum's gender gap index, while China ranks 107th.
Top-down measures that exhort people to have more children are rarely effective, said Yun Zhou, assistant professor of sociology, University of Michigan.
Changsha's festival launched what authorities described as a "marriage school", where men can use a pregnancy belly to simulate labour pain with levels 1-10, state-backed Changsha Evening News reported, saying it enabled couples to experience the "hardship and joy of nurturing life".
Couples can opt to change diapers and prepare formula milk at the expo to learn parenting skills, and get an "internship marriage certificate", the paper said. The expo will run every weekend until the end of November.
The festival missed the mark, said Weibo user Yuxiao.
"Treat girls as human beings and respect them. They don't want to get married in the first place, and then the authorities are putting so much pressure on them and their families with average economic levels to have children."
Source: Reuters