Latest YuWa Population Research Institute Report Indicates
that China’s Population Crunch is Set to Continue
The grim news regarding China’s ongoing demographic
crisis keeps piling up. The past two
years saw the population of the country actually decline, with an acceleration
in the long-term trend of lower fertility rates among Chinese women. The most recent report by the highly
respected Beijing-based YuWa Population Research Institute issued inFebruary of this year casts a harsh spotlight on one important
reason why these adverse population trends are likely to continue. According to the Institute, China is the
second most expensive country in the world to raise children. These costs, in turn, are a major factor behind
the reluctance of Chinese married and single women to have children.
According to official Chinese Government data, the populationof China dropped by 2.08 million people in 2023, with the number of
death (11 million) exceeding the number of births (9 million). This fall followed a population decline of
850,000 people in 2022. New births fell by 5.7% in 2023. That drop
reflects the worsening trend in China’s fertility rate, which had
fallen steadily from 1.5 births per woman in the late 1990s to 1.15 by 2021
(the fertility rate is the number of children a woman will give birth to in her
lifetime). It is now approaching 1.0, or
under half of the replacement rate of 2.1 needed for a country to sustain its
population. According to a May 1,
2024 Scientific American article, China’s population could fall
by half over this century.
The YuWa Institute reports pinpoints one key driving
force behind the Chinese population meltdown, namely the high cost of raising
children in the People’s Republic. The
report notes that there is only one country in the world, South Korea, where
the costs of raising a child exceeds that of China. It comes as no surprise that South Korean
women have even fewer children than their Chinese counterparts.
The Institute examined the average cost of raising a
child in China until the age of 18 and compared that figure to its GDP per
capita vs. that of more affluent advanced economies. It found that these costs were 6.3 times as
high as the Chinese GDP per capita. This
compares to 4.11 times per capita GDP in the US, 4.26 times per capita GDP in
Japan, 2.08 times per capital GDP in Australia, and 2.24 times per capita GDP
in France. According to YuWa, it costs
Chinese families an average of 538,312 Yuan, or nearly $73,000 to raise a child
up to the age of 18.
YuWa further notes that these costs vary markedly between urban vs. rural and upper vs. middle-class households. Urban families spend an average of 666,699 Yuan, or nearly $93,000, raising a child while rural households spend an average of 364,868 Yuan, or nearly $51,000 raising a child. Thus, the fertility rate of woman in affluent Shanghai, China’s economic powerhouse, is especially low, standing at 0.7 in 2022.
The YuWa report also emphasizes the disproportionate
economic cost borne by Chinese women in bearing and raising children. It documents in detail the extensive
opportunity costs that come with being a mother in China. According to YuWa, Chinese women generally
see a reduction of 2,106 working hours when caring for children aged 0-4 and
are hit with an estimated wage loss of 63,000 yuan, or $8,700, during this
period. These figures are based on an
estimated wage of 30 Yuan per hour.
Besides facing a 12-17% fall in wags, women get a significant reduction
of their leisure time, which rises further when they have more than one child.
In contrast to women, the livelihoods of Chinese men
do not change much after marriage and children. Fathers do experience only a
loss in leisure time, however, that loss is not as great as the loss in leisure
time borne by their spouses. Moreover,
as is true throughout most of the world, in China, women face the so-called
“double shift.” They are largely
responsible for household tasks, such as cleaning, cooking, and shopping, as
well as taking care of children. The
latter responsibilities including getting their children to school and
providing them with tutoring and assistance with school homework.
The high opportunity costs for Chinese women in having
children extend beyond loss of income and leisure time. YuWa reviews the well-known and heavily
documented job discrimination women encounter when seeking to balance work and
becoming mothers. Women taking maternity
leave often confront “unfair treatment” at the hands of employers, including
being transferred to other teams, being hit with pay cuts, or being denied
promotion opportunities. YuWa adds that
if the costs of maternity leave are entirely borne by a woman’s employer,
without any government aid, employers may avoid recruiting women of
childbearing age. This treatment extends
even to female job applicants who insist they have no plans to have children.
When choosing between advancing their careers vs.
having children, Chinese women therefore face painful tradeoffs. At the same time, they are now more educated and economically independent than ever. Women currently outnumber men in higher
education programs in China—disclosure alert, when I taught English at two
Chinese universities, I found the ladies to generally be much better students
than the fellows. As more and more
career paths open up for them, Chinese women are giving equal, if not more
priority, to their careers and self-development as opposed to being wives and
mothers. Given the obstacles being a
mother places on their ability to earn money to secure financial independence,
advance in their careers, and have leisure time, it is hardly shocking that
more and more Chinese women are saying no to children. In a 2021 Chinese General Survey, 48.3% of women questioned said they wanted just one or no children.
The findings of that 2021 survey are in line with the
observation of the writer Zhang Lijia, who has explored changing attitudes
toward marriage and motherhoods among Chinese women. In a February 21, 2024 Guardian article on the YuWa
Institute report, she notes that the high costs of education in China’s
ultra-competitive educational system and housing make raising children
financially difficult. Zhang states
that, “Many women I interviewed simply couldn’t afford to have two to three
children. Some can manage one; others
don’t even want to bother with one.”
Zhang further adds, “Another equally important factor is changing
attitudes. Many urban and educated women
no longer see motherhood as the necessary passage in in life or the necessary
ingredient for happiness.”
Zhang’s comments regarding the affordability of having
more than one child for Chinese couples dovetail with one of my more memorable
China experiences. Toward the end of my
time in the country, which lasted from August 2005 to June 2016, I had to go to
the dentist to get a couple of crowns put in—this procedure was done without
any Novocaine (in China, you are charged extra for Novocaine, and I decided to
tough it out and save a bit of money; fortunately, the teeth were dead). I went to a higher-end dental clinic opposite
my place of work, which was then an independent Chinese think tank, The Center
of China and Globalization, where I was a senior research fellow. For some reason, the dentist who did this
work offered to buy me dinner at a nearby upscale Beijing restaurant, Hatsune,
to which I gladly said “yes.” I asked
him, in my imperfect Mandarin, about his family and he indicated that he had a
wife and daughter. At that time, China
had relaxed the one-child policy for urban couples, so I asked whether he and
his wife planned on having another child.
The dentist answered “no,” citing the high costs of doing that. A second child, he explained, would
necessitate moving into a larger apartment, so the new member of the family
would have his/her own room. The dentist
further noted the high cost educating his daughter, which involved extensive
extracurricular stuff aimed at giving her up leg up in school, such as ballet
and music lessons, English tutoring, and the like. This fellow’s wife also worked as a dentist
at a higher-end dental clinic, so they were comfortable, upper middle-class
Chinese “Chuppies.” Yet they felt, at
least at that time, that it was not possible to afford having a bigger family.
YuWa concludes its report by arguing that China faces
an “urgent need” at the national level to institute policies aimed at reducing
the costs of child-bearing. It calls for
cash and tax subsidies for families with children, improved childcare services,
generous maternity leave, access to foreign nannies, allowing flexible working,
and giving single women the same reproductive rights as married women. There is no indication that the Chinese
Government will be implementing these recommendations anytime soon.
Even if the government were ready take up YuWa’s program for boosting birthrates, it is not at all that doing that would be very impactful. My skepticism stems from the experience of comparable East Asian countries plagued with low fertility rates and population declines. The case of South Korea, which, like China, has a Confucian culture, is especially instructive. Over the past decade and a half, South Korea has spent $200 billion in a concerted effort to get its women to have more childrenSouth Korea has spent $200 billion in a concerted effort to get its women to have more children. These funds have gone to a variety of pronatalist policies, including cash bonuses and other subsidies to couples having children, improving access to child-care, and the like. Despite all of this, fertility rates among South Korean women have hardly budged and remain among the lowest in the world. Indeed, the South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol is now calling his country’s low birthrate “national emergency,” announcing on May 9th the creation of a special ministry to tackle this crisis. I could add that in Japan, government efforts to get women to have more children have shown a similar lack ofeffectiveness. Fertility rates across East Asian countries, including China, are clearly “sticky” upward.
Chinese National Government officials are oddly sanguine about their country’s dreadful demography. In particular, they have embraced rosyprojections regarding future Chinesefertility rates. The 2016-2030 population development plan devised by the National State Council assumes that Chinese fertility rates will rebound to 1.8 by 2030. The municipal population plan issued by city of Wenzhou, an economically dynamic Chinese coastal metropolis, makes similar sunny predictions, stating that its total fertility rate will go back up to around 1.35 by 2035. This flies in the face of not just contemporaneous East Asian demographic trends, but all of the evidence on Chinese fertility, as elucidated in the latest YuWa report and other scholarly research on this matter. It is pure and simple magical thinking.
China’s demographic collapse is set to continue.
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