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As China’s population nears ‘normalised phase of decline’, experts assess pace and severity

  • Demographers offer varying takes on China’s population outlook, with some saying it could shrink by 1 million a year from 2025, while others foresee a more drawn-out decline
  • Excess of 10 million deaths a year could become the norm for China as its ageing crisis worsens

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Chinese mothers had just 10.62 million babies last year, as the national birth rate fell to a record-low 7.52 per 1,000 people. Photo: Getty Images

China’s population level could fluctuate around the point of growth stagnation in the coming years before it starts to decline, analysts say in light of new data showing the mainland’s overall population increased by just 480,000 people in 2021.

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The official numbers, released on Monday, are fuelling concerns about China’s demographic crisis, including worries that its population size may have peaked last year or will do so in the near future.

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

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The latest annual figures from the National Bureau of Statistics show that Chinese mothers gave birth to 10.62 million babies last year – down 11.5 per cent from 12 million in 2020. The national birth rate also fell to 7.52 births for every 1,000 people, down from 8.52 in 2020 and the lowest rate since data became available.
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