Beijing faces a demographic timebomb, with population growth at its lowest for six decades

“Of all things in the world, people are the most precious,” Mao Zedong said soon after taking power, believing China needed more soldiers and workers. The advent of peace saw the population rocket from 540 million to 969 million over the next three decades. Authorities abruptly switched to curbing births and brutally implementing the “one-child” policy.

These days, most Chinese couples are curtailing their families – or going without – by choice. The population now stands at 1.4 billion; a sixth of the global total. But last year’s birthrate was the lowest since 1949, and the rate of population growth the lowest since the Great Famine six decades ago. The pandemic has seen dramatic drops in births in many places. But in China, the shift is part of a pronounced long-term trend. Several experts believe that last year marked the population peak.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Labour vows to introduce Scottish-style right to roam law in England

Party promises to enshrine in law equal access to benefits of green…

Three remain in custody over Liverpool Women’s hospital blast

Taxi driver’s bravery praised after one person died in explosion on Remembrance…

US billionaire surrenders $70m of stolen art

Michael Steinhardt ‘displayed rapacious appetite for plundered artefacts’, says district attorney An…