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China population: Guangdong suffers first decline in over 4 decades, underlining demographic and economic woes

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Guangdong’s resident population fell by 272,000 from a year earlier to 126.57 million, although it remained China’s largest province in terms of population
68e0b690-1e0c-47b8-b0f1-90d3f9557d70_ecc5db07.jpg


China’s leading exporting province of Guangdong suffered its first population decline in over four decades last year, the latest sign of a demographic challenge that could reshape the country’s economic landscape.

The southern province said its resident population – people living in the region for more than six months – fell by 272,000 from a year earlier to 126.57 million, according to data released by the Guangdong Provincial Bureau of Statistics earlier this month.

“[The population decline] is a phase of temporary return of out-of-province migrants to their hometowns following the impact of the 2022 Guangdong [coronavirus] pandemic surge,” the bureau said after recording the first decline since the start of the data in 1978.

Meanwhile, on Wednesday, the United Nations Population Fund’s State of World Population report showed that India’s population will be 1.4286 billion by the middle of 2023 compared to China’s 1.4257 billion.

China’s overall population fell by 850,000 to 1.4118 billion last year, with a first decline in six decades confirmed as the national birth rate fell to a record low of 6.77 births for every 1,000 people.

Demographers previously projected India would surpass China in April, but the data is complicated as India only conducted its last population census in 2011, with the planned 2021 survey delayed due to the pandemic.

Guangdong remained China’s largest province in terms of population, while it contributed almost 11 per cent of the country’s total number of births last year with 1.05 million out of a nationwide total of 9.56 million.

But the popular destination for rural migrant workers is experiencing an outflow of labour amid a sluggish trade environment and a continuous loss of overseas export orders.

The province had an influx of 29.6 million migrant workers, or 23.5 per cent of its population, according to the 2020 nationwide census.

But the strict virus policies implemented in some cities in Guangdong last year, which led to multiple lockdowns, disrupted the production and exports of home appliances, clothing and automobiles, as well as the flow of workers.
According to data on mobile phone signals from Chinese operators, the outflow from Guangdong exceeded the inflow in 2022, indicating an outflow of people.

Guangdong joined the list of provinces experiencing population outflows in excess of 200,000 last year, joining Heilongjiang, Liaoning and Jilin which are famous for their long-standing outflow issues, with the likes of Zhejiang, Anhui, Hubei, Jiangxi and Guangxi all benefiting from inflows.

“[The provincial capital of] Guangzhou has seen successive outbreaks in different regions since October last year, which later spread to most parts of the province, and towards the end of the year, some of the out-of-province migrants chose to return home temporarily,” the provincial statistics website said.

Guangdong’s exports fell by 1.5 per cent from a year earlier to US$177.4 billion in the first quarter, compared to a 0.5 per cent increase in national exports in the same period.

Despite maintaining its position as China’s top importer and exporter for 37 consecutive years, Guangdong’s share of the country’s trade has decreased from 23.5 per cent in 2018 to 19.8 per cent last year before falling further to 17. 6 per cent in the first two months of the year.

To address sluggish trade orders along with its population loss, the Guangdong government promised after the Lunar New Year at the end of January to create a better business environment for the manufacturing sector and the real economy.

Mobile phone signal data showed that 84 per cent of people who left the province in January returned to Guangdong in February.

“With economic growth continuing, Guangdong will maintain its advantages in population scale and structure in the long term, its labour resources remain abundant, and the trend of maintaining long-term stable growth in the resident population will not shift, with Guangdong’s resident population expected to gradually return to stable growth in 2023,” the province’s statistics bureau said.

On Wednesday, foreign ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin played down concerns over the demographic crisis, stating that China’s demographic dividend has not disappeared and that its labour force is more educated.

 
Guangdong’s resident population fell by 272,000 from a year earlier to 126.57 million, although it remained China’s largest province in terms of population
68e0b690-1e0c-47b8-b0f1-90d3f9557d70_ecc5db07.jpg


China’s leading exporting province of Guangdong suffered its first population decline in over four decades last year, the latest sign of a demographic challenge that could reshape the country’s economic landscape.

The southern province said its resident population – people living in the region for more than six months – fell by 272,000 from a year earlier to 126.57 million, according to data released by the Guangdong Provincial Bureau of Statistics earlier this month.

“[The population decline] is a phase of temporary return of out-of-province migrants to their hometowns following the impact of the 2022 Guangdong [coronavirus] pandemic surge,” the bureau said after recording the first decline since the start of the data in 1978.

Meanwhile, on Wednesday, the United Nations Population Fund’s State of World Population report showed that India’s population will be 1.4286 billion by the middle of 2023 compared to China’s 1.4257 billion.

fell by 850,000 to 1.4118 billion last year, with a first decline in six decades confirmed as the national birth rate fell to a record low of 6.77 births for every 1,000 people.

Demographers previously projected India would surpass China in April, but the data is complicated as India only conducted its last population census in 2011, with the planned 2021 survey delayed due to the pandemic.

Guangdong remained China’s largest province in terms of population, while it contributed almost 11 per cent of the country’s total number of births last year with 1.05 million out of a nationwide total of 9.56 million.

But the popular destination for rural migrant workers is experiencing an outflow of labour amid a sluggish trade environment and a continuous loss of overseas export orders.

The province had an influx of 29.6 million migrant workers, or 23.5 per cent of its population, according to the 2020 nationwide census.

But the strict virus policies implemented in some cities in Guangdong last year, which led to multiple lockdowns, disrupted the production and exports of home appliances, clothing and automobiles, as well as the flow of workers.
According to data on mobile phone signals from Chinese operators, the outflow from Guangdong exceeded the inflow in 2022, indicating an outflow of people.

Guangdong joined the list of provinces experiencing population outflows in excess of 200,000 last year, joining Heilongjiang, Liaoning and Jilin which are famous for their long-standing outflow issues, with the likes of Zhejiang, Anhui, Hubei, Jiangxi and Guangxi all benefiting from inflows.

“[The provincial capital of] Guangzhou has seen successive outbreaks in different regions since October last year, which later spread to most parts of the province, and towards the end of the year, some of the out-of-province migrants chose to return home temporarily,” the provincial statistics website said.

Guangdong’s exports fell by 1.5 per cent from a year earlier to US$177.4 billion in the first quarter, compared to a 0.5 per cent increase in national exports in the same period.

Despite maintaining its position as China’s top importer and exporter for 37 consecutive years, Guangdong’s share of the country’s trade has decreased from 23.5 per cent in 2018 to 19.8 per cent last year before falling further to 17. 6 per cent in the first two months of the year.

To address sluggish trade orders along with its population loss, the Guangdong government promised after the Lunar New Year at the end of January to create a better business environment for the manufacturing sector and the real economy.

Mobile phone signal data showed that 84 per cent of people who left the province in January returned to Guangdong in February.

“With economic growth continuing, Guangdong will maintain its advantages in population scale and structure in the long term, its labour resources remain abundant, and the trend of maintaining long-term stable growth in the resident population will not shift, with Guangdong’s resident population expected to gradually return to stable growth in 2023,” the province’s statistics bureau said.

On Wednesday, foreign ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin played down concerns over the demographic crisis, stating that China’s demographic dividend has not disappeared and that its labour force is more educated.

Screenshot_2023-04-19-22-41-23-09.jpg

Images are from India.
 
Last edited:
Images are from India.
Never mind, US is going to become new India anyway

 
It doesn't look like Guangdong

68e0b690-1e0c-47b8-b0f1-90d3f9557d70_ecc5db07.jpg

Forget India. I am talking about China's population decline.. what is China's plan to combat this problem? Why was the one child policy even put in place? Were there ulterior motives at play? Many questions
 
Forget India. I am talking about China's population decline.. what is China's plan to combat this problem? Why was the one child policy even put in place? Were there ulterior motives at play? Many questions

Without the one child policy, Chinese population would be 1.7b by now. That would have been a disaster, while population decline is a positive development.
 
Without the one child policy, Chinese population would be 1.7b by now. That would have been a disaster, while population decline is a positive development.

Agreed. Less Chinese in the world can only be a good thing.
 
Different estimates put the figure between 2.5B - 3B people.
I believe China put in place the one child policy in the late 1970's, it lasted for about 40 years until being abolished in recent years, the result of those 40 years is very clear, obvious for everyone to see. check out what China was like 40 years ago and what it is like today.
 
Less population is a good thing.

The only issue is now how do Indian Pakistanis and Bangladeshis control their rate of multiplication.

World population should be at 5-6 billion people.
 
Less population is a good thing.

The only issue is now how do Indian Pakistanis and Bangladeshis control their rate of multiplication.

World population should be at 5-6 billion people.
Indians and Bangladeshis have already controlled it, we're at 2.1 TFR while Pakistan is at 3.6 or something.
 

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