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| Total
Population and Average
Number of Children per Woman in China, 1950-2050 |
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Source: United Nations, Department of Social and Economic Affairs,
Population Division: World Population Prospects, The 2008
Revision. New York, 2009
Note: This chart displays interpolated Total Fertility Rates
for single years. |
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According to the 2008 Revision of the
United Nations World Population Prospects, China's women, on
average, had more than 6 children in the early 1950s. The Total
Fertility Rate (TFR), which measures the average number of children
per women, briefly dropped in the late 1950s and early 1960s, as
China went through the disaster of the "Great Leap Forward", one of largest man-made famines in
recorded history. By
the late 1960s, China's TFR had again increased to almost 6 children
per woman. The very high fertility in the early 1950s and late 1960s
corresponded well with Mao's political dogma that a huge population
would promote China's military and political power. The
high fertility caused the enormous population increase of China and
is now responsible for the huge momentum effect which is now
incorporated in
China's age structure. |
| However, with the start of
China's "one-child" population policy the country experienced one
of the most dramatic declines in fertility in human history -
particularly if one takes into account the large number of people
that where involved in this fertility decline. Hundreds of
millions of women reduced their fertility and by the late 1990s
the country's TFR dropped below the so-called reproductive level of
about 2.1. Measured by (period) fertility, China's women, on
average, had less children than were necessary to replace the parent
generation. |
| While fertility measures
in China are still highly uncertain most experts agree that the TFR
is now well below the reproductive level of 2.1. The range of
uncertainty is indicated by the fact that credible sources have
published TFR estimates that range between 1.4 and 1.9 children per
women. The future trend of fertility in China is highly uncertain. In
their medium variant projection the United Nations Population
Division assumes a slight increase of fertility to 1.83
children per women in 2050. |
| Assuming that China's
total fertility would stay constant at current levels, the
population would increase - by population momentum alone - to 1.45
billion people around 2035, before declining to 1.38 billion people
in 2050. However, with an average fertility of about half a child
more, China's population could easily increase to 1.62 billion - as
indicated by the high variant of the 2008 Revision of the United
Nations World Population Prospects. |
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This data section was updated on April 17, 2010 |
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