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China’s private sector
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As China plans for demographic crisis, some sectors see opportunity

Goldman Sachs says pharmaceutical, biotech sectors could see strongest tailwinds, while car industry, tech hardware makers may struggle

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Two elderly people in Beijing on June 1. Photo: EPA
Julie Zhang
As China moves towards becoming one of the world’s fastest-ageing economies – a trend causing worry over future productivity and a widening gulf between the country’s working and retired populations – Goldman Sachs said the pharmaceutical and biotechnology sectors could end up the biggest winners from the demographic divide, while carmakers and technology hardware manufacturers may see fiercer headwinds.

Hong Kong and mainland China are both expected to enter the top 10 ranking for the world’s most ageing economies, respectively reaching first and eighth by the year 2050, according to a report released by the investment bank on Monday. Hong Kong was ranked 11th and mainland China stood at 26th in 2023.

South Korea, Japan, Poland, Spain, Italy, Germany, Austria and Portugal are also expected to either remain or enter the top 10.

The list is based on the projection of each country’s old-age dependency ratio – the share of people aged 65 and above relative to the working-age population – and its fertility rate.

“Healthcare ... will see the strongest demographic demand from ageing,” analysts said in the report.

In China, they highlighted Bluestar Adisseo, a Shanghai-listed animal nutrition additive maker, WuXi XDC Cayman, a pharmaceutical contract drug developer and Sichuan Kelun-Biotech Biopharmaceutical and Zai Lab, both oncology developers, are among their top buy-rated names with the strongest demographic-driven demand outlook by 2030. The latter three are traded in Hong Kong.
Zai Lab ranked among the top 10 in the 2025 China Pharmaceutical Innovation and Invention Index, published by IDEA Pharma, a benchmark measuring Chinese drug makers’ strength in clinical development, research and commercialisation.
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