Negative population growth is projected to commence in China in the year 2027, according to a new paper released by the state-run Chinese Academy of Social Sciences in early January.
This follows recent comments by some experts pointing out that the birth rate in China has fallen sharply, while Chinese authorities are likely reporting fake data on local birth rates.
But the latest data from China’s National Bureau of Statistics revealed that that is no longer the case. The number of births have dropped significantly in several cities in Shandong, including Qingdao, Liaocheng, Yantai, and Dezhou. In Qingdao, for example, between January and November 2018, births fell by 21.1 percent, and the births of second children fell by 29 percent, compared with the same period in 2017.
“In the past, the annual births were more than 20 million. Now it is only about 15 million,” Liu said. “Even though China now allows the second child, the birth rate is still declining. Shandong is a typical example. Live births in Zibo [a city in Shandong] dropped 26 percent last year.”
According to Huang Wenzheng, a senior researcher at the Chinese think tank, Center for China and Globalization, China’s birth rate is roughly 1.2 (children born per woman), so—contrary to government estimates—the turning point into negative population growth will definitely come before 2027.
Yi Fuxian, a senior scientist at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, along with an economist from the National Economic Research Center of Peking University in China, Su Jian, shared similar views. In a recent article they wrote jointly, Yi and Su predicted that China has already entered negative population growth either in 2018 or will do so in 2019.
Yi told RFA that the paper published by Chinese Academy of Social Sciences is based on the assumption that China’s birth rate would continue to be 1.6—its current rate—or more in the following years. However, Yi believes this rate will not be sustained.
Yi also added that the Chinese authorities have consistently fudged data in order to make China appear to have a stable birth rate. The 2000 census showed that China’s birth rate was 1.22, but the National Bureau of Statistics later changed it to 1.8, according to Yi.
Had the Bureau not repeatedly reported false data, Yi believes the Chinese regime would have awoken to the dangers of the one-child policy earlier.
“It’s time to hold them accountable,” he said.
The decline in China’s birth rate is among the most drastic in the world. According to the Evergrande Research Institute of Tsinghua University, the birth rate in China fell from 6 to 1.6, compared to the United States, where it fell from 3.3 to 1.9 between 1950 to 2015, and Japan, where it fell from 3 to 1.4.