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China's population
EconomyChina Economy

China doubles subsidies for child, elderly care facilities to deal with demographic decline

  • As China faces an ageing population and declining birth rate, it will incentivise the addition of new space in care facilities to accommodate changes
  • New version of plan for elder, child care doubles subsidies for new beds, encourages community-based services to bolster existing structure

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China’s ageing population, set to increase substantially in the coming years, will need more care services and facilities to ensure quality of life. Photo: Xinhua
Luna Sunin Beijing
To address the rapidly evolving needs of its ageing population – a pressing issue made all the more severe by a sinking birth rate – China has disclosed a strategy to expand its community-based elderly care networks, as well as childcare centres.

In a revised version of an implementation plan for care services covering those both young and old, Beijing said it will further improve resource networks in rural areas. The new iteration of the plan was published in a document released Tuesday by the National Development and Reform Commission – the country’s top economic planner – as well as the Ministry of Civil Affairs and the National Health Commission.

In the adjusted plan, Beijing bumped up subsidies for new establishments for both elderly care and childcare, with each new bed for elderly care added to an eligible facility netting the facility a grant of 50,000 yuan (US$6,911), and 20,000 yuan for each new slot in universal childcare service venues.

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In the original plan, published in June 2021, the corresponding rates were 20,000 yuan and 10,000 yuan per new slot.

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The change comes as China grapples with twin demographic challenges – an ageing population and a declining birth rate. These trends have fuelled fears of a diminished labour force, stretched social welfare systems and substantial healthcare expenses.

These looming worries have cast a shadow over the nation’s economic growth – already haunted by a slump in the property market, debt woes for local governments and a need to alter China’s conventional investment and export-oriented growth model as global socioeconomic conditions grow complicated.

China had 216.76 million people aged over 65 last year, up from 200 million in 2021 according to official data. The Economist Intelligence Unit said in a February report that people over 60 will account for 32.7 per cent of China’s population by 2035, up from 21.1 per cent in 2023. The proportion of those 65 and above will also rise, from 15.4 per cent last year to 25.1 per cent by 2035.

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