Abstract

A precise multi-scenario prediction of future population, based on micro-scale census data and localized interpretation of global scenarios, is significant for understanding long-term demographic changes. However, the data used in previous research need to be further refined. Few studies have focused on predicting the sex ratio at birth, which is vitally important for estimating the future size and structure of the population. It is also important to interpret and set parameters for China’s future population development in line with the framework for global shared socioeconomic pathways. This paper, therefore, used the structural population data for provinces, prefectures, and counties from the Sixth National Population Census of China. It comprehensively considered the impact of China’s economic development level, specific population policies, and loss of an only child on key parameters, and localized the population change parameters for different scenarios. A population–development–environment model was used to explain the population change parameters. The population of 340 districts was refined, forecast, and aggregated to the national scale. The results show that the Chinese population is expected to first increase then decrease under the five paths from 2010 to 2050. The aging demographic structure is not reversed under any paths, and the increase or decrease in the urban and rural populations between adjacent node years is closely related to the fertility rate and urbanization speed. We suggest that measures should be taken to encourage childbearing, manage the aging population problem, and reduce the pressure on young and middle-aged people.

Highlights

  • Population figures are the foundation of human, social, and economic development

  • The large population, high fertility rate, and low mortality rate had a negative impact on the improvement of the living standards of Chinese people in the 1970s [4]

  • China’s population development under our intermediate forecast is, comparable to the forecasts made by other institutions

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Summary

Introduction

Population figures are the foundation of human, social, and economic development. The government and scholars, agreed that population control was essential, and planned to achieve this through administrative, legal, and economic means. Since the 1980s, the government has successively introduced a policy encouraging one-child families, a strict one-child policy and population control tightened [5]. The strict one-child policy led to a rapid decline in China’s fertility rate. This fell from 5.7 in 1970 to 2.0 in 1990, below the normal replacement level of 2.1, and the total population was considered to have been controlled [6]

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