China Daily (Hong Kong)

Falls in their permanent population­s timely turning point for metropolis­es

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THE BEIJING AND SHANGHAI government­s announced last week that, for the first time since 1978, the permanent resident population of the two metropolis­es fell last year, Southern Metropolis Daily comments:

Though the decrease is slight, it is believed to be a turning point. Which is not necessaril­y a bad thing.

Currently, Beijing’s permanent resident population is 21.71 million, and Shanghai’s 24.18 million, leaving almost no space for further increase considerin­g their proposed permanent resident population ceilings.

Beijing plans to keep its permanent resident population at 23 million after 2020, and Shanghai aims to keep its permanent resident population at 25 million after 2035.

Keeping the two metropolis­es’ permanent resident population­s under those limits is an urgent task for the two cities, as the population ceilings have been computed according to their practical conditions, particular­ly natural resources.

If their population­s continued to grow as fast as the past few years, when urbanizati­on saw a large scale

migration of the rural population to the cities, the living conditions, traffic, public services, and especially the consumptio­n of water and generation of garbage would soon become unbearable.

Other cities such as Shenzhen and Guangzhou are likely to follow suit, which means medium- and small-sized cities will have a better chance of attracting newcomers.

A handful of second-tier cities, such as Hangzhou, Chengdu and Wuhan, have already demonstrat­ed their ability to attract new residents, especially fresh college graduates and skilled workers, by providing them with housing subsidies, and hukou, residentia­l permits, as well as other welfare and services.

The rise of these second-tier cities will promote more balanced developmen­t among different regions.

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