ЁЯСНChina loses more than 40 mn workers in three years as population ages | Business Standard News

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The data reflects a rapid rise in the number of people retiring, likely raising pressure on Beijing to accelerate unpopular plans to raise official retirement ages

Photo: Bloomberg

ChinaтАЩs number of working people has fallen by more than 41 million in the past three years, reflecting both the coronavirus pandemicтАЩs toll on the economy and a decline in the working age population.

Some 733.5 million Chinese people were employed in 2022, according to the countryтАЩs statistics bureau. ThatтАЩs down from 774.7 million in 2019. The data reflects a rapid rise in the number of people retiring, likely raising pressure on Beijing to accelerate unpopular plans to raise official retirement ages.

The drop reflects factors such as higher youth unemployment due to the pandemic as well as a shrinking number of people in the тАЬclassic age group of the working-age population,тАЭ said Stuart Gietel-Basten, a demographer at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology.

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The number of people in┬аChina┬аaged between 16 and 59 has been gradually declining since 2012. Over the last three years, the number in that group dropped 38 million to 857.6 million тАФ a much more rapid fall than in previous years.

Demographic change was the тАЬdriving factorтАЭ in 2022тАЩs employment drop, said Lu Feng, a labor economist at Peking University, as the population reaching the age of 60, a common retirement age in China, тАЬincreased dramatically.тАЭ

ChinaтАЩs economic growth is expected to accelerate this year due to the end of coronavirus restrictions and a sharp drop in infections.

As a result, the number of employed people in China тАЬcould rise this year as people return to the work force,тАЭ said Larry Hu, China economist at Macquarie Securities Ltd, adding that тАЬit will remain on the structural downtrend due to the aging population.тАЭ

ChinaтАЩs┬аretirement┬аage has remained unchanged for more than four decades at 60 for men and 55 for female white-collar workers, even as life-expectancy has risen. China experienced a baby-boom during the 1960s, meaning a large cohort of┬аworkers┬аwill fall out of the 16-59 age group over the course of this decade.

The countryтАЩs ruling Communist Party has listed retirement age reform among its key economic tasks for the year. More detail on reform plans may be provided this month, when the annual government work report is presented at the National PeopleтАЩs Congress тАФ an annual meeting of ChinaтАЩs rubber-stamp parliament.

The strength of public opposition to any changes was highlighted last month, when a research report from Citic Securities forecasting a rise in the retirement age for women starting in 2025 sparked widespread criticism online.

ChinaтАЩs workforce has also become significantly more urbanized over the last decade, according to ChinaтАЩs statistics bureau, a trend economists see as positive for economic growth. About 63% of workers were employed in urban areas last year, up from 50% a decade previously.

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ChinaтАЩs workers are becoming more productive, too. Labor productivity тАФ defined as gross domestic product produced per worker тАФ increased by 4.2% in 2022, the statistics bureau said. That has slowed, though, from rates of around 6% per year reported in the 2010s.

Yu Jiadong, a vice-minister of human resources and social security, told a briefing on Thursday that the decrease in ChinaтАЩs working age population was driven by rising numbers of retirees, adding that China has тАЬthe largest population and labor force of any developing country.тАЭ

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