BusinessMirror

China’s population likely shrank in 2022 as births hit new low

- With assistance from Jing Li and Fran Wang / Bloomberg.

China’s population likely started shrinking last year for the first time in decades, experts say, a significan­t milestone that will have long-term repercussi­ons for the economy.

As recently as 2019, the United Nations was forecastin­g that China’s population would peak in 2031 and then decline. By last year, though, the UN had revised that estimate to see a peak at the start of 2022. It now expects China to lose 110 million people by 2050 and fall to about half its current size by the end of the century.

The government’s official data for total number of births in 2022—expected to be released next week— will probably show a record low of 10 million, according to independen­t demographe­r He Yafu.

That would be less than the 10.6 million babies born in 2021, which was already the sixth straight year of declines and the lowest since the founding of the People’s Republic of China in 1949. He added that the country likely recorded more deaths last year than the 10.1 million people who died in 2021, in part because of the spread of Covid infections.

The anticipate­d population dropoff is coming much faster than previously expected, and could curb growth in the world’s second-largest economy. The labor force is already shrinking, long-term demand for houses will fall further, and the government may also struggle to pay for its underfunde­d national pension system.

The upshot is that China’s economy may struggle to overtake the US in size and it could lose its status as the world’s most populous country to India this year.

Births fell in many nations during the pandemic as people feared going to hospitals, lacked family support because of lockdown restrictio­ns and balked at child-care costs.

China, however, faces additional problems spurred in part by the decades-long enforcemen­t of a “onechild policy” that skewed the gender ratio, given the traditiona­l preference among Chinese parents for sons. That has led to a decline in the number of women of child-bearing age that will be hard to reverse— even after the government ended the policy and allowed families to have more children.

“The measures taken to boost birth rates have been far too little and too late, and were completely overwhelme­d by the impact of Covid Zero on birth rates,” said Christophe­r Beddor, deputy China research director at Gavekal Dragonomic­s.

“The core issue is that there’s only so much policy can accomplish in this realm, because declining birth rates are driven by deep structural factors,” Beddor said, adding that economic challenges posed by China’s aging and shrinking population have been discussed for years. “The leadership seems to have belatedly realized that those issues are very real and arriving very quickly.”

As recently as 2019, the United Nations was forecastin­g that China’s population would peak in 2031 and then decline. By last year, though, the UN had revised that estimate to see a peak at the start of 2022. It now expects China to lose 110 million people by 2050 and fall to about half its current size by the end of the century.

The fall in the working-age population will be even greater: That group will slump to about 650 million people in 2050, a drop of about 260 million from 2020, according to Bloomberg Economics.

They forecast that the demographi­c headwinds will cut into the long-term growth potential of the economy unless government policies to promote having children start to be effective.

It may take a few years for the population to settle into a steady contractio­n, according to Yuan Xin, a demographi­cs professor at Nankai University in Tianjin. He cited the government’s decision to ease birth limits and introduce policies to encourage childbirth.

“Usually population growth would hover around zero for a few years before one can conclude that a country has entered the phase of population contractio­n,” he added.

The economy also may not feel an immediate hit from the population decline. Labor can still be shifted from less-productive or rural sectors, such as farming, to other areas, according to Wang Tao, head of Asia economics and chief China economist at UBS AG. “Total labor supply for the non-farming sector can still go up,” she said.

A change to the retirement age may address some of the issues, she added. Countries such as Japan have been successful in maintainin­g the total size of the labor force even as the population aged and shrank, as more older people worked and women who’d left the workforce to raise a family returned.

China would have to overcome some challenges, though. The topic has been discussed for years but never implemente­d at scale, and has frequently sparked public outcry. The country has kept that age—60 for men and 55 for women white-collar workers — unchanged for more than four decades, even as life expectancy has risen. By contrast, most men and women in Japan and Taiwan can retire and start drawing a pension a few years later.

The issue may come up again soon. At last month’s Central Economic Work Conference, China’s leadership said that they would “push forward the postponeme­nt of legal retirement ages in a gradual manner at the right time to actively deal with the issues of population aging and low birth rate,” according to a readout of the meeting.

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