Comment by pjc50
5 hours ago
Over what timescale? Is the presumption that China, the country of one child policy, will do nothing about the problem?
5 hours ago
Over what timescale? Is the presumption that China, the country of one child policy, will do nothing about the problem?
China has ALREADY transitioned from an "aging society" (7% of the population over 65) to an "aged society" (14% over 65).
There are roughly five working-age adults to support every retiree today. This is going to crater. United Nations projections show that by 2050, that ratio will more than double, climbing past 50%. At that point, China will have fewer than two working-age adults for every retiree. The west grew rich before growing old. China, Vietnam, Brazil are aging as middle income countries.
The one child policy was like doing speed, it temporarily freed up massive amounts of capital and labor. But China's work force peaked over a decade ago. The bill is now due, and all the those "single children" know that they are expected to support 2 parents and 4 grandparents.
Aside from the dubious wisdom of similar interventions, cruelly forcing abortions was a lot easier policy to enforce then it would be to try to shove pro-natalist policies on people increasingly overburdened with caregiving for elders because of earlier interventions.
https://www.piie.com/research/piie-charts/2024/chinas-popula...
they already have in 2016. https://www.cnn.com/2026/01/01/china/china-one-child-anniver...
> Is the presumption that China, the country of one child policy, will do nothing about the problem?
I don't think they're foolish enough to invite the entire third world into the country to bolster low birth rates like the west does. So that leaves doing it the old fashioned way, which is a slow ship to turn around.