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China’s working age population is shrinking

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Many Meituan food delivery workers are lining up to make preparations in Shanghai, China, on January 14, 2024. (Photo by Costfoto/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

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BEIJING — China’s working age population is shrinking as a share of the total number of people in the country, according to official data released Wednesday.

People ages 16 to 59 accounted for 61.3% of mainland China’s population last year, down from 62% the prior year, National Bureau of Statistics data showed.

The country is rapidly aging as fewer people have children and lifespans increase. Births have fallen despite Beijing’s efforts in the last decade to start to unwind restrictions on households to one child each.

A shrinking working age ratio means fewer people have to support a larger share of the population, even as the number of people in China overall declines.

China’s total population dropped by more than 2 million people to 1.41 billion in 2023 from the prior year. That was a far greater decline than the drop of 850,000 people in 2022 from the year earlier — the first time the country’s population shrank since the 1960s.

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China’s working age population has declined after reaching a peak in 2011, UBS analysts said in a report last month.

“A shrinking working age population along with structural shifts in labor supply demand dynamics are accelerating the adoption of technology — from automation and robotics to digitalization and AI — to 1) meet labor needs and 2) raise productivity while saving costs,” the analysts said.

They noted there are still opportunities for China to boost its workforce productivity by boosting vocational education, tapping oversupply in rural labor and raising the retirement age.

Youth unemployment

A large base vs. the world

Mainland China’s total population of people ages 16 to 59 was 864.81 million in 2023 — more than double the size of the entire U.S. population of 334.9 million.

The World Bank’s latest figures, which use a broader working age range of 15 to 64, showed the segment’s share of China’s population fell in 2022 to 69%, down from 69.2% the prior year.

That share had exceeded 70% as recently as 2018, the data showed.

Despite the decline, China’s working age population ratio was greater than Japan’s 58.5%, 64.9% in the U.S. and 68.5% in Vietnam, as of 2022.

For India, the share was 67.8% of the total population in 2022, up from 67.5% the prior year, World Bank data showed.

— CNBC’s Michael Bloom contributed to this report.

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