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China Tops 100 Million Elderly
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China Tops 100 Million Elderly
By Zhou Liang(周靓)
Economic Observer Online
Translated by Laura Lin 
Original article: [Chinese]
http://www.eeo.com.cn/2011/0825/209545.shtml
A new report shows China sliding faster and faster into an "aging society," which creates both economic and social pressures on the world's most populous country.
Proof is multiplying that China is aging at an alarming pace. If measured by international standards, China has been an aging society since 1999, announced Li Jianguo (李建国), vice-chairman of China's National People's Congress. Li Jianguo's remarks, as reported by Xinhua News Agency, were made during the presentation of the NPC Standing Committee's law enforcement report on the Elderly Protection Act. 
According to this report, in November 2010, China had 178 million people over 60 years old, of which 119 million are over 65. That accounts for, respectively, 13.26 percent and 8.87 percent of the total population, and makes China the only country in the world with more than 100 million elderly people.
But more worrying is how the statistics are set to unfold in the future: China's elderly demographic will surpass 200 million in just three years, and top 300 million by 2025. By 2042, more than 30 percent of China's total population will be over 60.
These numbers, says Yuan Xin (原新), professor at the Institute of Population and Development at Nankai University, mean that China is "running headlong" into an aging society. 
Yet, as a particularly populous country, China is quite distinct from other societies. The report characterizes it as "an aging society with Chinese characteristics." That means, beyond the elderly group's large piece of the demographic pie, the changes are also occuring at an accelerated pace. Moreover, many of China's old people live alone, and a large number of disabled elderly live in hardship.
Over the past decade, the number of people over 80 years old has almost doubled to more than 20 million. 
As young people leave home to work in other cities, the number of elderly people living on their own has grown to 50 percent. Among them, 33 million of the elderly are disabled or partly disabled.
Li Jianguo said China has established a basic social pension system. There are 236 million people who participate in the old-age insurance scheme for urban enterprise workers. 
Currently, there are also 58 million retirees who receive state pensions (a mere 4.5 percent of the population), and the new rural social pension scheme will cover 60 percent of all counties by the end of this year.
In 2010, for every five working-age people, there was one old person being supported. According to the new estimates, that ratio will drop to three working-age people for each elderly person by 2020.
Traditionally, Chinese people used to say "raise children in preparation for one's old age," (养儿防老) as families were counted on to care for senior citizens. But when both the husband and wife each come from a single-child family, bearing the responsibility of four elderly parents, whether economically or physically, will become unbearably heavy.
Cai Fang (蔡昉), Director of the Institute of Population and Labor Economics of China's Academy of Social Sciences, pointed out that when social changes break the foundations on which traditional values were based, the pension models are bound to change accordingly.
Yet, though plenty of Chinese are accepting the idea of a public pension, in reality, there's more demand than supply in social care services. According to the report, there are old-age beds for only 1.8 percent of the population in China, in comparison with 5 to 7 percent in developed countries, and 2 to 3 percent in developing countries.
The Chinese authorities have proposed to provide up to 30 old-age beds per thousand aged-people in the next five years, an increase of 3.4 million beds, an absolutely colossal task.
Experts believe that the main reason for such slow development of nursing homes in China is due to the huge long-term investment necessary, as well as the low return rate on investment. It's a sector that does not attract private capital.
The NPC's Standing Committee recommended an acceleration of a public old-age nursing system, while the government should also help push the private sector into building these services.
Although China enacted the Elderly Protection Act (中华人民共和国老年人权益保障法) in 1996, the rate of the demographic changes has outpaced proposed reforms. It is imperative to reform this law in order to highlight the responsibility of the government in finding the required investment and in promoting the construction of an old people care system.
News in English via World Crunch
http://www.worldcrunch.com/china-tops-100-million-elderly-crunching-numbers-demographic-time-bomb/3653
Links and Sources
NPC.gov.cn: Report highlights scarcity of elderly care facilities in China
http://www.npc.gov.cn/englishnpc/news/2011-08/25/content_1667275.htm
Gov.cn: 中华人民共和国老年人权益保障法 (Full text of Elderly Protection Act in Chinese)
http://www.gov.cn/banshi/2005-08/04/content_20203.htm

 

By Zhou Liang(周靓)
Economic Observer Online
Aug 25, 2011
Translated by Laura Lin 
Original article:
[Chinese]

A new report shows China sliding faster and faster into an "aging society," which creates both economic and social pressures on the world's most populous country.

Proof is multiplying that China is aging at an alarming pace. If measured by international standards, China has been an aging society since 1999, announced Li Jianguo (李建国), vice-chairman of China's National People's Congress. Li Jianguo's remarks, as reported by Xinhua News Agency, were made during the presentation of the NPC Standing Committee's law enforcement report on the Elderly Protection Act. 

According to this report, in November 2010, China had 178 million people over 60 years old, of which 119 million are over 65. That accounts for, respectively, 13.26 percent and 8.87 percent of the total population, and makes China the only country in the world with more than 100 million elderly people.

But more worrying is how the statistics are set to unfold in the future: China's elderly demographic will surpass 200 million in just three years, and top 300 million by 2025. By 2042, more than 30 percent of China's total population will be over 60.
These numbers, says Yuan Xin (原新), professor at the Institute of Population and Development at Nankai University, mean that China is "running headlong" into an aging society. Yet, as a particularly populous country, China is quite distinct from other societies. The report characterizes it as "an aging society with Chinese characteristics." Emphasising that, beyond the large piece of the demographic pie that the elderly in China represent, the changes are also occuring at an accelerated pace. Moreover, many of China's old people live alone, and a large number of disabled elderly live in hardship.

Over the past decade, the number of people over 80 years old has almost doubled to more than 20 million. 

As young people leave home to work in other cities, the number of elderly people living on their own has grown to 50 percent. Among them, 33 million of the elderly are disabled or partly disabled.

Li Jianguo said China has established a basic social pension system. There are 236 million people who participate in the old-age insurance scheme for urban enterprise workers. 

Currently, there are also 58 million retirees who receive state pensions (a mere 4.5 percent of the population), and the new rural social pension scheme will cover 60 percent of all counties by the end of this year.

In 2010, for every five working-age people, there was one old person being supported. According to the new estimates, that ratio will drop to three working-age people for each elderly person by 2020.

Traditionally, Chinese people used to say "raise children in preparation for one's old age," (养儿防老) as families were counted on to care for senior citizens. But when both the husband and wife each come from a single-child family, bearing the responsibility of four elderly parents, whether economically or physically, will become unbearably heavy.

Cai Fang (蔡昉), Director of the Institute of Population and Labor Economics of China's Academy of Social Sciences, pointed out that when social changes break the foundations on which traditional values were based, the pension models are bound to change accordingly.

Yet, though plenty of Chinese are accepting the idea of a public pension, in reality, there's more demand than supply in social care services. According to the report, there are old-age beds for only 1.8 percent of the population in China, in comparison with 5 to 7 percent in developed countries, and 2 to 3 percent in developing countries.

The Chinese authorities have proposed to provide up to 30 old-age beds per thousand aged-people in the next five years, an increase of 3.4 million beds, an absolutely colossal task.

Experts believe that the main reason for such slow development of nursing homes in China is due to the huge long-term investment necessary, as well as the low return rate on investment. It's a sector that does not attract private capital.
The NPC's Standing Committee recommended an acceleration of a public old-age nursing system, while the government should also help push the private sector into building these services.

Although China enacted the Elderly Protection Act (中华人民共和国老年人权益保障法) in 1996, the rate of the demographic changes has outpaced proposed reforms. It is imperative to reform this law in order to highlight the responsibility of the government in finding the required investment and in promoting the construction of an old people care system.

News in English via World Crunch

Links and Sources
Sohu: 全国人民代表大会常务委员会执法检查组关于检查《中华人民共和国老年人权益保障法》实施情况的报告 (Full text of report into the implementation of the Elderly Protection Act in Chinese)
NPC.gov.cn: Report highlights scarcity of elderly care facilities in China
Gov.cn: 中华人民共和国老年人权益保障法 (Full text of Elderly Protection Act in Chinese)

 

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