The People’s Republic of China is facing a rapid change in its population’s age structure following a dramatic decline in fertility that began in the 1960s; by 2024, the fertility rate had dropped to the world’s second-lowest level—well below the replacement level. China’s population shrank in 2022, and the country is experiencing one of the fastest transitions to an aged society. To fully understand what China’s demographic trends mean for China’s future, the effectiveness of the country’s population policies, and the impact of those policies on China’s regional and global foreign security relationships, RAND is publishing a series of analyses focusing on the potential consequences of these demographic trends. This report, the first in the series, provides an introduction to China’s demographic trends through 2050 and an overview of historical population growth policies. The authors also explore the implications of these trends for China’s national security, and they propose potential policy responses.
Fertility Decline in China and Its National Military, Structural, and Regime Security (Michael S. Pollard, Jennifer Bouey, Agnes Xiangzhen Wang, Rakesh Pandey – RAND Corporation)
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