Zhu Ping
Too many or too old” has long been a debate among Chinese demographers.But the answer to the question, according to official statistics released on Friday, may be both. For the first time, China officially announced that its population on the mainland crossed 1.4 billion, temporarily wiping out speculations that India might surpass China as the world’s most populous country. However, heavy hangs the head that wears the crown of the country with the largest population. Good news came at the same time that China’s economy registered an annual GDP of 99.0865 trillion yuan ($14.4 trillion) in 2019, and GDP per capita reached $10,276. For years Chinese demographers have been addressing the challenge that “China isn’t rich yet, but its population is aging”. The news that China’s economy is moving toward the 100 trillion yuan mark brings a sigh of relief. But that doesn’t mean China could rest assured on its daunting population challenges. The Chinese population is not only the largest in size, but also has a very unbalanced structure. The World Health Organization issued an alert on the dramatically rising pace of aging among populations across the world. France had almost 150 years to adapt to the rise in aging population from 10 percent to 20 percent of the total, whereas China has to adapt to the change in slightly more than 20 years. The Friday figures don’t draw a clear picture on China’s aging in 2019. But by the end of 2018, the number of people aged above 60 had reached 249 million, more than 17 percent of the total population. And a country with more than 10 percent of its population above 60 is already labeled as an aging society. The population above 60 is widely expected to increase to 255 million in 2020. It’s high time for the most populous country to race against the fast pace of aging, from making up for the shortfall in pension funds to improving its healthcare system and expanding nursing care services. To curb the trend of fast aging, China has eased its population policy since 2013. And since the new year of 2016, China has implemented a policy to allow all couples to have a second child. But the huge costs to raise a child, including the high housing prices and big expenditures on education, hinder many couples from having a second child. In 2019, there were 14.65 million newborns, and the population had an increase of 4.67 million year-on-year. The decline in new births means the Chinese population may reach its peak of less than 1.5 billion even before 2030, a demographer named Cui Shuyi predicted. Days ago, Liang Jianzhang, founder of China’s largest online travel agency Ctrip.com and a Peking University professor, sparked huge controversy. He said in a talk show that the Chinese population will continue to decrease and even be extinct in a thousand years, if birth rates remain at the current low level. Such a hypothesis is eyecatching and impressive, but doesn’t hold water. People’s willingness to have children fluctuates with times, based on the economy, policy, culture and other factors playing complicated roles. And as China’s birth rates have seen rapid changes in the past decades, how can the rates remain at the same level for hundreds of years? However, Liang did draw attention to the urgent population challenge in an exaggerated way. In Northeast China, the population witnessed negative growth, aggravating the already grave aging situation. Liaoning province’s population has witnessed negative growth since 2011, despite the nationwide two-child policy.