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Chinese population ageing, moving to the cities

China says population rises to 1.339 billion
Beijing (AFP) April 28, 2011 - China said on Thursday its population -- already the world's largest -- increased by 73.9 million over the past decade to 1.339 billion in 2010, citing the results of the latest national census.

The increase since the previous full nationwide 10-yearly census in 2000 was more than the population of Thailand -- and greater than the populations of Taiwan and South Korea put together.

The 2010 figure was released by the National Bureau of Statistics, which unveiled the census results at a briefing in Beijing.

China's population in 2000 was 1.265 billion.

China has previously said its so-called "one-child" population control policy -- which generally limits people to one offspring, with exceptions for certain groups -- has averted 400 million births since its imposition in 1980.

China had a population of 594 million, less than half the current figure, in its first census in 1953.

by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) April 28, 2011
China's population is ageing and flocking to cities, according to the latest national census results released on Thursday, showing the world's most populous country now counted 1.339 billion people.

The population increase of nearly 74 million since the previous full nationwide 10-yearly census in 2000 was more than the population of Thailand -- and greater than the populations of Taiwan and South Korea put together.

But the latest 10-yearly census also confirmed widely expected shifts in a population that is growing older and flowing into cities in search of economic opportunities -- posing challenges for Chinese policymakers.

The census found that more than 13 percent of the population was over the age of 60, up nearly three percentage points from the 2000 count.

"Over the past 10 years, the populations of all of China's 31 provinces, municipalities and autonomous regions have increased, and all face the problem of rapid ageing," NBS commissioner Ma Jiantang told reporters in releasing the figures.

Demographers say China's "one child" population-control policy has left it with an unusual problem: it is greying while still a developing nation -- a challenge other economies have only had to face at a more advanced stage.

The speed at which the number of elderly in China is increasing has alarmed the government, with the nation's healthcare system already straining and two-thirds of rural workers without pensions.

The number of people in cities, meanwhile, rose to 665 million last year, or 49.7 percent of the population, and more than 221 million people were considered migrants -- rural residents seeking work in towns and cities.

China has for centuries been a mainly agrarian nation with most of its vast population in the countryside.

But economic reforms undertaken three decades ago triggered a population shift to cities and coastal areas, and the census showed China could soon have a majority of its people in urban areas.

The 49.7 percent of the population living in cities in 2010 marked a jump of 13.46 percentage points from the 2000 tally, the census said.

China may need to invest up to 24 trillion yuan ($3.6 trillion) in urban infrastructure by 2020 to accommodate the growing number of rural residents moving to the country's cities, a report by the China Development Research Foundation, a state think tank, said late last year.

On Tuesday, President Hu Jintao said the "one-child" policy, which applies to most families, would continue, as the population continues to strain resources and government services.

The census found 118.06 males were born in China to every 100 baby girls over the past 10 years, Ma said, an imbalance often attributed to the Chinese preference for male heirs and viewed as a possible source of instability.

Men currently make up over 51 percent of the population, Ma said.

A study last year warned that over 24 million men of marrying age could find themselves without wives in 2020, a potentially explosive social problem.



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