_: The decline in China’s population last year is likely to have exceeded the historic fall recorded in 2022, China Daily quoted a senior demographer as saying on Tuesday.
Yuan Xin, a Professor at Nankai University’s School of Economics and Vice-President of the China Population Association, said the decline will be greater because of the lingering impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, the decreasing number of women of childbearing age, a low willingness to have babies and the growing trend of getting married and having babies at a later age.
He made the remarks during a forum held by the association ahead of the release of the 2023 population data on Wednesday.
China recorded the first decline in its population in about six decades in 2022.
Yuan said the years 2021 and 2022 marked a watershed in China’s demography, with the total population of 1.413 billion recorded by the end of 2021 considered the peak.
One fundamental factor influencing demography is the fertility rate – the average number of children bor
n to a women of childbearing age. It fell below 1.1 in 2022, Yuan said.
He said the overall rate of decrease for China’s population would be mild in the coming three decades, regardless of fertility rate levels.
He said that by 2050, China will have a population of around 1.2 to 1.4 billion, accounting for 14 to 18 percent of the world’s population. However, in the longer term, the decline could be dramatic and the lower the fertility rate, the steeper the fall in total population.
Source: Emirates News Agency