China Daily (Hong Kong)

Country must hasten bid to build a secure society for senior citizens

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Thursday marked China’s Chongyang or Double Ninth Festival, which falls on the ninth day of the ninth month in the Chinese lunar calendar, and is traditiona­lly a day for paying respect to the elderly. While wishing all senior citizens a happy, healthy and long life, President Xi Jinping outlined what the country must do for them.

Government­s at all levels should attach great importance to the work related to senior citizens; implement the national strategy of actively dealing with the aging population and speed up efforts to improve the social security system, old-age service system and health support system to safeguard the legitimate rights and interests of senior citizens and enable them to share the fruits of reform and developmen­t, Xi said.

According to the seventh national census, China had 264 million people aged 60 or above in 2020, accounting for 18.70 percent of the total population. The country is expected to become a moderately aging society during the 14th FiveYear Plan (2021-25) period, underlinin­g the urgent need to build sound social security and old-age service systems.

Infrastruc­ture in old residentia­l areas should be improved and the renovation of nursing homes for the elderly should be accelerate­d. In order to ensure that the fruits of improved infrastruc­ture can be enjoyed also by senior citizens, the country needs to increase institutio­nal innovation, policy supply and financial investment. The gap between urban and rural infrastruc­ture also needs to be narrowed.

However, just building hardware that is suitable for senior citizens is not enough to build a senior citizenfri­endly society. It is equally important to bridge the digital divide for the elderly. This year’s Government Work Report for the first time talked of solving elderly people’s digital problems, namely promoting intelligen­t services to meet their needs, and ensuring that smart tools do not cause obstacles in their daily lives.

Relevant State department­s have already promulgate­d guideline documents to promote the transforma­tion of internet applicatio­ns so that travel, medical treatment, internet-based taxi-hailing and other services become easier for senior citizens.

Certainly, more improvemen­ts are needed. To what extent a senior citizen-friendly society is built will depend on how their legitimate rights and interests are protected. Some cheap travel services offered by travel agencies to senior citizens and other investment and wealth management traps should be looked into.

Given its rapidly aging society, China should race against time to ensure that hundreds of millions of its senior citizens lead a happy, healthy and secure life.

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