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People & CultureSocial Welfare

ExplainerWho are China’s ‘elderly drifters’? Seniors on the move domestically and overseas face language barriers, culture shocks

  • China’s over-60s make up 7.2 per cent of migrants, about 18 million people
  • Treated as ‘servants’ by family, stuck indoors with grandchildren, they often feel lonely

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Old people in China are migrating, both domestically and overseas, to be with their families. The Post takes a closer look at the mainland’s so-called elderly drifters. Photo: Shutterstock
Iris Jiang

It used to be that the twilight years were a time to settle down in one place and enjoy a peaceful retirement. But things have changed in China.

Today, it is common for the country’s elderly to become either domestic or overseas migrants.

In China, life expectancy for men is 78 and for women, 79. However, people over the age of 60 account for 7.2 per cent of the mainland’s domestic migrating population, according to the latest Development of the Migrant Population Report.

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That is about 18 million people, more than twice the population of New York.

Just under 70 per cent of such people relocate voluntarily to reunite with their families, the report said.

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They are referred to as elderly drifters, or lao piao in Mandarin. Of China’s 297 million-strong ageing population, six per cent fall into this category.

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