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Charted: China’s Population Is Rapidly Aging (1950–2100)

Charted: China’s Population Is Rapidly Aging (1950–2100)

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Key Takeaways

  • China’s population has shifted from one of the world’s youngest in 1950 to one projected to be heavily skewed toward seniors by 2100.
  • Falling fertility and the one-child policy accelerated China’s demographic aging before it reached high-income status.
  • Beijing is trying to reverse record-low birth rates with subsidies, tax breaks, and pro-natalist messaging.

China’s population is aging at a historic pace.

The visualization above, created by Oscar Leo of DataCanvas using data from the UN World Population Prospects 2024, shows how the country’s age distribution has shifted from 1950 and how it is projected to change through 2100.

In 1950, nearly a quarter of China’s population (24.5%) was aged 0–9. By 2024, that share has fallen to just 9.9%, and by 2100 it’s projected to shrink to 5%. Meanwhile, the population aged 80+ is expected to surge.

From Baby Boom to Birth Drought

In the mid-20th century, China was a young nation. High fertility rates, exceeding six births per woman in the 1950s, produced a broad-based population pyramid.

The table below divides China’s population into three buckets—youth, working-age, and seniors—and shows how dramatically that balance is projected to shift over the 21st century.

Year Total
(Under-15s)
Share
(Under-15s)
Total
(15-64 years)
Share
(15-64 years)
Total
(65+ years)
Share
(65+ years)
1950 189268865 34.8% 327341085 60.2% 27433877 5.0%
1960 264106864 40.3% 364725977 55.7% 25968767 4.0%
1970 335853316 40.8% 456928893 55.5% 30526573 3.7%
1980 354891524 36.1% 585059009 59.5% 43212838 4.4%
1990 332207164 28.8% 759714747 65.9% 61660067 5.3%
2000 311607227 24.5% 868881396 68.4% 89087971 7.0%
2010 249688143 18.5% 984808248 72.9% 117053342 8.7%
2020 256055030 18.0% 989716558 69.4% 180299849 12.6%
2030 169741083 12.1% 971978211 69.5% 256360965 18.3%
2040 125901572 9.4% 859475953 64.0% 357286132 26.6%
2050 125320828 9.9% 745290858 59.2% 389291776 30.9%
2060 99180376 8.7% 613135302 54.1% 422064944 37.2%
2070 75818157 7.6% 524428731 52.6% 396611350 39.8%
2080 72882216 8.4% 405136704 46.7% 389977526 44.9%
2090 62358104 8.4% 330723295 44.7% 347531046 46.9%
2100 49631917 7.9% 293476753 46.6% 286008961 45.5%

The introduction of the one-child policy in 1980 abruptly changed the country’s demographic trajectory. Intended to curb runaway population growth, the policy accelerated fertility decline well below the replacement rate of 2.1 children per woman.

Even after the policy was scrapped in 2015, births continued to fall. China’s population declined for the third straight year in 2025, with new births hitting record lows.

Growing Old Before Growing Rich

Unlike many Western economies, China’s fertility rate fell to ultra-low levels before the country became fully developed. This means it is aging rapidly without the same per capita wealth cushion seen in places like Japan or Germany.

By 2100, projections show that nearly 40% of China’s population could be aged 60 or older. The working-age population will shrink, while retirees expand, which is a dynamic that raises concerns about labor shortages, pension sustainability, and slower economic growth.

Can Policy Reverse the Trend?

Projections are not predictions. They assume current fertility, mortality, and migration patterns continue, and Beijing is working hard to shift those patterns. In recent years, authorities have rolled out subsidies for parents, tax breaks, housing incentives, and even framed childbirth as a “national duty”.

Yet so far, financial incentives have struggled to overcome structural forces: high housing costs, competitive education, urbanization, and shifting social norms.

Whether China can meaningfully alter its demographic course remains uncertain. What is clear from the data, however, is that the country’s age structure in 2100 will look radically different from the youthful nation it was in 1950.