The Telgraph reports: how more and more Britons are paying Indian women to become surrogate mothers.
"There are now up to 1,000 clinics, all entirely unregulated, in the country, many specialising in helping Britons become parents.
"Couples and single people are paying an average of £25,000 a time to have children, getting around rules in the UK which make commercial surrogacy illegal.
"It is estimated that 2,000 births to surrogate mothers took place in the country last year, with most experts agreeing that Britain is the biggest single source of people who want to become parents in this way. Britain may account for as many as 1,000 births last year in India. In contrast there were 100 surrogate births recorded in Britain last year.
...
"Dr Sharma has chaired a committee which has drawn up proposals for industry standard. It would guarantee safety standards for the first time, outlaw sex selection, forbid women capable of childbirth making use of surrogacy and set up the first register of clinics, with a regime of inspections and sanctions for those which fail them.
...
"However the legislation has yet to be considered by India’s parliament and it could be many years before it becomes law. Dr Sharma’s committee has called for urgent action.
...
"Clinics in India offer fertility treatments which would-be parents in Britain would either be unable to have for legal reasons, or would face lengthy waits on the NHS to obtain.
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"One clinic in New Delhi, The Birthplace of Joy, said that their patients were “100 per cent foreign” and estimated that as many as half of them were homosexual couples wanting to become parents."
Official Launch of Centre for Market Design
| Event | Official Launch of Centre for Market Design |
| Date | 7th Jun 2012 5:00pm |
|
The Centre for Market Design is a collaboration between the University of
Melbourne, the Commonwealth Treasury, and the Victorian Department of Treasury
and Finance. Drawing on well established expertise in areas of economic design,
and research strengths in the underlying disciplines of mechanism design,
information economics, structural econometrics and experimental economics, the
Centre will provide an institutional framework to build research capacity and to
support ongoing policy collaboration. Queries to be directed to Preeta Philip, 03 8344 5290. |



