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Reversal of China’s Demographic Fortune (Fundación Ramón Areces, Madrid, March 22, 2012)

Reversal of China’s Demographic Fortune (Fundación Ramón Areces, Madrid, March 22, 2012). Wang Feng. The China Miracle The Demographic Factor in China’s Rise Reversal of Fortune What’s Ahead?. The China Miracle

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Reversal of China’s Demographic Fortune (Fundación Ramón Areces, Madrid, March 22, 2012)

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  1. Reversal of China’s Demographic Fortune(Fundación Ramón Areces, Madrid, March 22, 2012) Wang Feng

  2. The China Miracle • The Demographic Factor in China’s Rise • Reversal of Fortune • What’s Ahead?

  3. The China Miracle • Economic growth: second largest, largest exporter and manufacturer, soon to be the largest economy • Poverty reduction: 500 million • What drove the recent growth?

  4. The Chinese Growth Model • Growth in the last thirty years has been based on a heavily physical capital and labor intensive model • Internal constraints (costs): resources, environment, and inequality • External constraints: export market, resources • The demographic factor

  5. The Demographic Factor: Congruence of Two Booms(population age distribution, China) (Mason and Wang 2007)

  6. (Mason and Wang 2007)

  7. Economic Growth(demographic dividend: divergent paths) (Mason and Wang 2007, Wang and Mason 2008)

  8. China’s Demographic Fortune(annual growth rate of effective support ratio, 1982–2000) (Wang and Mason 2008)

  9. Reversal of Fortune(annual growth rate of effective support ratio, 2013–2050) (Wang and Mason 2008)

  10. New Demographic Era • Annual birth number dropped by nearly 10 million from the peak in the late 1980s • Growth rate only a third of the level in the late 1980s

  11. Driving Force: Low Fertility

  12. Anomaly No More

  13. Age Structure, China (1982, 2010, 2040)

  14. Prospect of Rapid Population Aging • Number of elderly (65+) will double in the next 20 years, from 117 to 238 million • Share of elderly population will go up from 8.7 to 16.8% in 20 years, and to over ¼ by 2042 • Japan: 9.1% in 1980, 22.6 in 2010, and 35% by 2040

  15. How does China’s Aging Differ from Other Societies? • Pace • Size • Weak social and familial infrastructure

  16. China’s Accelerated Demographic Transition:Life Expectancy

  17. China’s Accelerated Demographic Transition:Fertility Decline

  18. Pace of Aging, Selected Countries

  19. Old before Rich, China and its Neighbors GDP per capita when population aged 65+ reach 9%, in 1990 International Geary-Khamis dollar. Source: Maddison 2010.

  20. Declining Support Ratio (Number of working persons per 60+, China and other BRIC economies)

  21. Declining Support Ratio (Number of working persons per 65+, China and other large economies)

  22. Changing Labor Supply • Total size(20-59) reaches a plateau, moderate increase in the next 10 years • Young labor (20-24) reached peak and will decline by nearly 20% in the next one and 1/3 in the next two decades

  23. Smaller but more productive? • Available college age youths actually smaller due to educational expansion – shortage of unskilled young labor • A more productive labor force in the long run

  24. Fragile Families (share of women aged 35-49 with one or no child, 2005) 38.6% of all women of this age group

  25. Fragile Families (share of women aged 35-49 with one or no child, urban China, 2005) 67.2% of all women of this age group

  26. What’s Ahead? • Aging population: labor, consumption, savings and government spending • Growth will slow down • Needs a new model driven by domestic consumption • Productivity increase and human capital deepening • Social infrastructure building • These tasks interact and will be extremely challenging

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