China’s Economic Demography Transition Strategy: A Population Weighted Approach to the Economy and Policy by GLO Fellow Lauren A. Johnston in her new GLO Discussion Paper.

A new GLO Discussion Paper elaborates China’s consequential and ongoing economic demography transition strategy within the economic and development policy discourse.

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GLO Discussion Paper No. 593, 2020

China’s Economic Demography Transition Strategy: A Population Weighted Approach to the Economy and Policy Download PDF
by
Johnston, Lauren A.

GLO Fellow Lauren A. Johnston

Author Abstract: The first pandemic of the 21st century has brought Pyrrhic attention to one of the era’s greatest megatrends – population ageing. Today rich countries are disproportionately affected but increasingly the world’s elderly are residents of developing countries. In rich and poor countries alike, a policy approach that explicitly accounts for the interdependence of economic and demographic change – an economic demography transition approach – has never been more pressing. Thanks partly to the tragedy of history’s greatest Malthusian stagnation, that of mid-20th century China, Chinese policymakers implemented draconian population control measures alongside dramatic economic reforms from around 1980. This paper elaborates China’s consequential and ongoing economic demography transition strategy within the economic and development policy discourse. Amid epochal demographic, public health, and geo-economic change, this economic demography perspective is timely, unique and useful in extrapolation across all economies.

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