China’s population up less than half a million in 2021, births plunge again as crisis deepens

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China’s population up less than half a million in 2021, births plunge again as crisis deepens

Mainland China’s overall population increased to 1.4126 billion last year, but ‘shocking’ national growth rate hits record low of 0.34 per thousand

Chinese mothers gave birth to 10.62 million babies last year, an 11.5 per cent drop from 2020


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Orange Wang and Luna Sun

Published: 10:03am, 17 Jan, 2022

Mainland China’s population increased by less than half a million last year, and the number of births also dropped for the fifth consecutive year in 2021, data released on Monday showed.



China’s overall population increased by about 480,000 people – to 1.4126 billion in 2021, from 1.412 billion a year earlier, the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) confirmed. The population includes China’s 31 provinces, autonomous regions and municipalities, as well as servicemen, but excludes foreigners. It does not include Hong Kong, Macau or Taiwan.



Chinese mothers gave birth to 10.62 million babies last year, an 11.5 per cent drop from 12 million in 2020, the NBS confirmed. The national birth rate fell to a record low of 7.52 births for every 1,000 people in 2021, from 8.52 in 2020.



The national death rate was 7.18 per thousand last year, putting the national growth rate at 0.34 per thousand.



“The most shocking part of the data release today is that the natural growth of the population has dropped to 0.34 per thousand, the first time below 1.0 since data become available,” said Zhang Zhiwei, chief economist at Pinpoint Asset Management. “The demographic challenge is well known, but the speed of population ageing is clearly faster than expected.



“This suggests China’s total population may have reached its peak in 2020. It also indicates China’s potential growth is likely slowing faster than expected.”

Chen Wei, a professor with the Population Development Studies Centre at Renmin University, said: “In the next 10 to 20 years, China’s natural population growth will not continue to decline, but will fluctuate around zero and see small drops, but there will not be rapid decreases.”


Earlier this month, Henan province, the country’s third-most-populous administrative region, reported that its number of newborns fell to 920,000 in 2020 – a 23.3 per cent decline from 2019 – as the provincial birth rate dropped to 9.24 births per 1,000 people.

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“The pandemic has caused some people to lose their jobs or suffer pay cuts,” said He Yafu, an independent demographer. “A decrease in household income, in addition to the uncertainties that the pandemic has added to the future, further lowered young people’s willingness to give birth.”




Experts have warned that a demographic turning point may be just around the corner in the world’s most populous nation, and some say it threatens to erode the foundation of China’s booming economic growth over the past 40 years.

Beijing has already taken steps to curb the trend, such as by allowing couples to have a third child and by trying to reduce abortions for “non-medical” purposes.



Dozens of provincial and municipal authorities have also introduced their own initiatives to bump up fertility. These include giving parents more days off work, or even financial support, for having a second or third child.

China’s young women say they don’t need kids to win at life, defying Beijing


“China’s total population will remain above 1.4 billion for a period of time to come,” said Ning Jizhe, deputy head of China’s National Development and Reform Commission, the nation’s top economic planner. He added that the three-child policy is expected to gradually add births, while the national life expectancy is gradually increasing.

Additional demographic figures released on Monday include a year-on-year increase of 12.05 million permanent residents in urban areas, to 914.25 million. Meanwhile, there was a 11.57 million decrease in rural permanent residents, to 498.35 million.



“The share of urban population in the total population (urbanisation rate) was 64.72 per cent – 0.83 percentage points higher than that at the end of the previous year,” the NBS statement said.



China’s so-called “floating population”, featuring mostly migrant workers, reached 384.67 million in 2021, 8.85 million more than in 2020. And the population living in areas other than where they hold household registration, for at least six months, reached 504.29 million, or 11.53 million more than in 2020.

 

xizhimen

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This is indeed a concern, some new policies must be put in place to stop this trend. in Chinese social media netizens proposed various plans, free education from kingdergarten to college, free house for parents, year long maternity and paternity leave, special monthly cash rewards....
 

Viva_vietnamm

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This is indeed a concern, some new policies must be put in place to stop this trend. in Chinese social media netizens proposed various plans, free education from kingdergarten to college, free house for parents, year long maternity and paternity leave, special monthly cash rewards....
Yes, low birth rate could be the problem for VN in near future, too as many Vnese still don't wanna have kids when they are 30. Hope CN can find out a good solution so VN can learn it from CN to increase the birth rate.

Less young men also mean less innovative, thats why many companies in CN (and in VN) only hire employee under 35.

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Coronavirus leaves China’s over-35s with uncertain job prospects​




For some Chinese workers, celebrating their 35th birthday is starting to feel like a curse.
Amid the frenzied competition for jobs stirred up by the economic impact of the pandemic, a growing number of employment ads are imposing age limits of 35 – leaving many Chinese nearing middle age feeling uncertain about their future.
Complaints about age discrimination in the job market – including for positions in the civil service – have flooded Chinese social platforms, and state media even have a name for the trend: the “age 35 phenomenon”.

Get the latest insights and analysis from our Global Impact newsletter on the big stories originating in China.
David Huang, who is in his forties, is one of the scores of Chinese workers above 35 feeling increasingly vulnerable. After the small clothing factory he owned in the southern province of Guangdong closed last year, he now traipses between wet markets and roadside stalls trying to sell his remaining inventory of about 10,000 garments.
I’m almost 50. Am I going to look for jobs? No. There’s nothing for me out there.

David Huang
“I’m almost 50. Am I going to look for jobs? No. There’s nothing for me out there. Finding jobs is too difficult,” Huang said. “Just look at how bad business is in those clothing retail shops in Guangzhou, you will get an idea how bad wholesaling and manufacturing garments is at the moment.”
On Zhihu, China’s version of the American question and answer website Quora, a discussion thread called “How does a 40-year-old unemployed individual live on?” has clocked up more than 27 million views since 2019. In post after post, users share their frustration about trying to find work in their middle age.
And the situation only appears to have deteriorated with the pandemic.
Nearly two thirds of people aged 35 and above who were laid off in March last year were still looking for jobs in September, according to a report released last month by the Development Research Centre of the State Council, which was based on data and a survey from Chinese job portal Zhaopin.


From February to September, the number of people above 35 who submitted their resumes on Zhaopin increased by 15 per cent from a year earlier, more than double those under 35.
Resume submissions were particularly strong in industries that have been heavily affected by the pandemic, like retail and wholesale.
As a consequence, nearly half of the job applicants above 35 fell from middle or high-income groups to low income because their earnings had dropped, according to the study.
More than 70 per cent said they face pressure meeting mortgage payments and other costs, such as children’s education and medical bills. The study also estimated a third of them could only survive at current spending levels for 3 months.
 

Xenon54

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This is indeed a concern, some new policies must be put in place to stop this trend. in Chinese social media netizens proposed various plans, free education from kingdergarten to college, free house for parents, year long maternity and paternity leave, special monthly cash rewards....
The toxic working environment must be corrected first, nobody has time for a family if they have to work 12 hours a day on 6 days a week.
Thats neither healthy for the society nor efficient for the companies.

The chart about Labor productivity shows a huge gap between west and east, happy workers are good workers thats a simple fact.

1643143721641.png
 

Tonil

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China will eventually have to stay paying youths to give birth
 

Heartbang

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China will eventually have to stay paying youths to give birth
It would be too little too late.

keep in mind official data from CCP never gets published as is, it always gets "massaged" one way or another. This is a nation that reported 82.000 cases between jan. 22 - mar 31 while the Chinese mobile operators lost a combined 21 million subscribers. Real data is probably more grim.
 
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xizhimen

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It would be too little too late.

keep in mind official data from CCP never gets published as is, it always gets "massaged" one way or another. This is a nation that reported 82.000 cases between jan. 22 - mar 31 while the Chinese mobile operators lost a combined 21 million subscribers. Real data is probably more grim.
This is a very stupid western anti China propaganda claim, Chinese people unsubsribe their phone service during the Chinese new year time cause many people have several numbers for work, and lie weaving western media claims in one month 22 million Chinese people died.LOL, and they are being reborn soon afterwards.
_20201107172935-png.686552




China: mobile phone subscriptions by month 2020-2021
As of November 2021, about 1.64 billion mobile phone subscriptions had been registered in China.

Now China's phone subscriptions are the highest ever, you don't believe China sudden gained so many population in one year, do you?
 
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Viva_vietnamm

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The toxic working environment must be corrected first, nobody has time for a family if they have to work 12 hours a day on 6 days a week.
Thats neither healthy for the society nor efficient for the companies.

The chart about Labor productivity shows a huge gap between west and east, happy workers are good workers thats a simple fact.

View attachment 39021
CN economy rely on exporting low price products bcs Chinese are still not good at making high value products like chips, cars, luxury items ( ( (like Rolex watch, perfume, Vuitton bags etc )

So, if Chinese don't work hard, then many companies will quit CN and move to VN, India etc where they can manufacture everything in much cheaper cost...and more CNese will become jobless.

Thats why Nike just quit CN and move to VN and ID now when CN workers asking for too high salaries when doing just the same work to VN-ID workers.



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Vietnam officially surpassed China to become the main production place for Nike shoes.

CNBC news agency quoted the newly released financial report of the sports company Nike as saying that in 2021, Vietnam's shoe production for Nike accounts for 51%, while this rate in China has dropped to 21%. In 2006, China produced shoes for Nike at 35%.

The report also said that Indonesia also surpassed China in the production rate of Nike shoes with a figure of 35%.

In fact, Nike is not the only representative to move factories from China to Vietnam. Even their biggest rival, Adidas, is moving in a similar direction, with 40% of its footwear production being made in Vietnam.

Why has Vietnam surpassed China to become the largest Nike shoe producer?

According to a representative of the Vietnam Leather, Footwear and Handbag Association, Nike branded products are supplied by 191 manufacturing factories located in 14 countries around the globe. In particular, most of Nike's footwear products are manufactured outside the US through more than 15 independent contract manufacturers. Before 2010, China was the largest manufacturer of Nike footwear, but has since been replaced by Vietnam.

Talking to Lao Dong, Ms. Phan Thi Thanh Xuan - Vice President and General Secretary of the Vietnam Leather - Footwear - Handbag Association, the reason why Vietnam has become the largest Nike shoe producer in the world is because Vietnam has human resources are abundant. "The potential from the abundant labor force is the factor that attracts Nike to choose Vietnam," said Ms. Xuan.

 
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