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Opinion | Why China’s declining population growth may be good news

  • Evidence suggests that in all prosperous countries where women are well educated and free to choose whether to have children, fertility rates fall significantly. This should be seen as a positive development
  • When populations no longer grow, there are fewer workers per retiree, but also a reduced need for infrastructure and housing investment

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A couple push children in a stroller in Shanghai on June 1. Chinese mothers gave birth to 12 million babies last year, down from 14.65 million in 2019, marking an 18 per cent decline year on year. Photo: EPA-EFE
China’s recently published census brought warnings of severe problems for the country. “Such numbers make grim reading for the party,” reported The Economist. This “could have a disastrous impact on the country,” Huang Wenzheng, a fellow at the Center for China and Globalization in Beijing, told the Financial Times.
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But a comment posted on the microblogging platform Weibo was more insightful: “The declining fertility rate actually reflects the progress in the thinking of Chinese people – women are no longer a fertility tool.”

China’s fertility rate of 1.3 children per woman in 2020 is well below replacement level, but so, too, are fertility rates in every rich country. Australia’s rate is 1.66, the US’ rate is 1.64, and in Canada it is 1.47. In all developed economies, fertility rates fell below replacement in the 1970s or 1980s and have stayed there ever since.

Only in poorer countries, concentrated in Africa and the Middle East, are much higher birth rates still observed. In India, all the more prosperous states – such as Maharashtra and Karnataka – have fertility rates below the replacement level, with only the poorer states of Bihar and Uttar Pradesh still well above. 

And while the national rate in 2018 was still 2.2, the Indian National Family Health Survey finds that Indian women would like to have, on average, 1.8 children.

01:20

Indian baby girl found buried alive puts spotlight on female infanticide in the country

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Half a century of evidence suggests that in all prosperous countries where women are well educated and free to choose whether and when to have children, fertility rates fall significantly below replacement levels. If those conditions spread across the world, the global population will eventually decline.

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