Why is the Chinese government urgently promoting childbirth now?
Because population has been declining since 2022 and long-term projections show a severely worsening dependency ratio driven largely by the legacy of the one‑child policy, threatening the workforce that underpins China's economy and global power.
What is the dependency ratio and how will it change for China?
The dependency ratio measures working‑age people per dependent (children and retirees). China currently has a relatively healthy ratio (~4.5 workers per dependent), but projections show it worsening dramatically — by mid‑century becoming similar to Japan's stresses and by the end of the century potentially reaching far
Have pro‑natal incentives worked elsewhere, and will they likely reverse China's decline?
Evidence shows financial incentives and campaigns rarely reverse deep fertility declines tied to wealth and social change. While incentives may modestly raise births short‑term, no country has fully returned to replacement fertility purely through subsidies.
Could immigration solve China's demographic problem?
Immigration can substantially improve workforce demographics (as seen in the U.S.), but China currently has very low immigration and strong political, cultural, and policy barriers that would require major shifts to use migration at scale.
What political or geopolitical risks arise from a shrinking population?
Historically, declining powers can become more aggressive or unstable as they try to defend status. For China, a shrinking workforce and rising social costs could constrain growth, increase domestic pressures, and raise the risk of more assertive foreign policy or internal political strain.