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Most populous country is now India, academic claims

FINDINGS ARE BEING DISPUTED, WITH ONE DEMOGRAPHE­R CALLING THEM ‘SLOPPY’

- BY TOM PHILLIPS IN BEIJING AND MICHAEL SAFI IN DELHI

Claims that India may already have overtaken China as the world’s most populous nation have sparked consternat­ion among demographe­rs.

The claims were made on Monday by Yi Fuxian, a University of Wisconsin-Madison academic who has spent years campaignin­g against Beijing’s draconian family planning laws, and picked up by newspapers in both China and India.

Speaking at a conference in Beijing, Yi said he was convinced that over the last 26 years Chinese statistici­ans had overestima­ted the country’s population by about 90 million, partly by inflating rates of fertility.

As a result, China’s population at the end of last year would have been 1.29 billion.

The academic repeated his claims yesterday in an interview with the Guardian.

“I think the real number is 1.29 billion but the government thinks it is 1.38 billion,” Yi said. “India is maybe 1.32 billion right now.”

Yi argued that his findings showed that Beijing — which ditched its notorious one-child policy for a two-child policy in 2015 — should immediatel­y scrap all such controls in order to soften the blow of a looming ageing crisis.

He said he hoped his controvers­ial findings would prompt a debate over China’s demographi­c time bomb which he called the country’s “number one problem”. Instead, however, they have stirred up a storm with Chinese and India scholars expressing bewilderme­nt and scepticism at his claims.

‘Politicise­d calculatio­ns’

Wang Feng, a leading demographe­r from the University of California, Irvine, dismissed Yi’s claims as sensationa­l, extremely sloppy and based on highly politicise­d back-of-the-envelope calculatio­ns.

“He’s a person with a political agenda and [who has been] a consistent critic of the Chinese government’s policy ... [so] his numbers should not be taken at face value.”

“I don’t disagree with his general criticisms [of China’s birth control policy],” Wang added.

“But ... we have to speak from facts or we just speak from conjecture ... I think he just wants to make a point to say that fertility is very low in China, the government has inflated the birth numbers, and [therefore] China should have no birth control policy.”

Asked what he thought China’s true population was, Wang said: “I would go with the government number.”

Indian demographe­rs also scotched the suggestion their country had already overtaken China.

“China is still the most populated, but India will overtake them by 2025,” said Laushram Ladu Singh, a population researcher at Mumbai’s Internatio­nal Institute for Population Sciences.

India’s population, currently around 1.3 billion, has quadrupled since the country became independen­t in 1947 but the speed of growth — still very high at around 17.7 per cent in the decade to 2011 — is slowing significan­tly.

The World Health Organisati­on projects India’s population will reach 1.7 billion by 2050 and begin to decline.

In southern states such as Tamil Nadu and Kerala, where quality of life is higher, population growth has already stabilised.

The large increases are being driven by eight mostly northern states, including Uttar Pradesh and Jharkhand, that are “lagging in the developmen­t and social sectors”, said Singh.

“In many states fertility has come down to the replacemen­t level, by which we mean one woman replacing one daughter on average,” Singh said. “But in these eight big states, which make up 40 per cent of the population, fertility is still high, though coming down.”

Wang said Chinese statistici­ans might have overstated the size of China’s population but would not have been so “simple and foolish” to do so by 90 million people.

“That is two Spains. It’s not possible to be off by that much. That’s like one of China’s largest provinces not being there.”

If current trends continued, Wang said it was likely, possibly over the next five years, that China’s population would peak at about 1.4 billion and then start to fall.

‘It doesn’t matter’

India’s population, depending on its growth rate, might overtake China’s within the next decade. “It could be a few years earlier, it could be a few years later ... But the bottom line is China has not yet been passed by India.”

Wang said he expected some Chinese nationalis­ts to lament the day China was passed by India. But ultimately it was irrelevant if one country had slightly more people than the other.

“Whether it is number two or number one or number three, it doesn’t matter ... Any serious politician or serious person would not think this matters.

“It doesn’t change anyone’s life except people who like China to be number one. I don’t care. Most people should not care.”

I think the real number is 1.29 billion but the government thinks it is 1.38 billion. India is maybe 1.32 billion right now.”

Yi Fuxian | University of Wisconsin-Madison academic

Whether it is number two or number one or number three, it doesn’t matter ... Any serious politician or serious person would not think this matters.”

Wang Feng | demographe­r from the University of California

The World Health Organisati­on projects India’s population will reach 1.7 billion by 2050 and begin to decline. In southern states such as Tamil Nadu and Kerala, where quality of life is higher, population growth has already stabilised.

 ?? AP ?? Commuters disembark from trains at a train station in Mumbai.
AP Commuters disembark from trains at a train station in Mumbai.

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