China's Demographic Dilemma and Potential Solutions, 1st ed. 2020
Population Aging and Population Control

Research Series on the Chinese Dream and China’s Development Path Series

Language: English
Cover of the book China's Demographic Dilemma and Potential Solutions

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197 p. · 15.5x23.5 cm · Hardback
This book is a quantitative assessment of the challenges China faces as it tries to achieve the twin goals of mitigating the effects of population aging while containing the overall size of the population. After a close examination of the impact of China?s fertility policies on the country?s population structure and size, the author presents empirical evidence for the effectiveness of finely calibrated easing of the country?s decades-long birth control policies for both of these objectives. This research uses an innovative quantitative indicator?the Aging and Economic Coordination Index (AECI)?to measure the macroeconomic pressure population aging places on the country. This is the first time the AECI has been systematically applied to gauge the magnitude and the trends of that pressure for the 1980?2050 period, and to provide the basis for policy suggestions about what might be done to ease that pressure.
Introduction.- The Economic Pressure of Population Aging and its Adjustments in China.- The Relationship between Population Aging and Fertility Policies in China.- Three -Constraints of Aging on China’s Population Development Strategy and Countermeasures.
Long Mo did his doctoral and post-doctoral work in Canada. He now serves as a professor at the Guangxi College of Administration, and as former director and tier-two professor at the Institute of Population Research of Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region. Mo receives a special governmental allowance from the State Council and is an expert on the National Social Sciences Fund (China) Demographics Department Demographic Planning and Review Panel. He is an Executive Board Member of the China Population Association and a Board Member of the China Association of Gerontology and Geriatrics. He began studying and teaching demographics in 1985, his primary research area being aging and the geriatric population. Mo spent a decade working and researching for Institut national d'études démographiques (INED, National Institute of Demographic Studies in France), the demography department of the Université de Montréal, and Statistics Canada (an agency of the Canadian government). He has written and published many academic papers and books in Chinese, French, and English. He supervised to completion of a research project for the National Social Sciences Fund (China), which received an award for excellence. He has won three provincial-level tier-one prizes and five provincial-level tier-two prizes for his research achievements (as sole or first author). One compilation of his research papers was included in the Library of National Achievements in Philosophy and the Social Sciences, published in China. His works have twice been included in National Fund for Social Sciences Foreign Translations of Chinese Academic Works, which is currently being translated into English and Japanese for imminent publication. Mo previously served as co-professor at the Université de Montréal, and has accepted invitations to present his research in France, Belgium, and Canada.
 
Yuhong Wei is a professor at the Guangxi College of Administration, a member of the school’s acade

Provides quantitative indicator to assess demographic and economic consequences of China’s birth control polity

Searches for solutions for the dilemma of mitigating population aging at the same time as controlling population size in China

Echoes with China’s “Population New Deal” that went into practice in 2013