China’s Population Hits Rock Bottom: The One-Child Policy May Have Destroyed the Country’s Future
China’s birth rate fell to a record low of 5.63 births per 1,000 people in 2025, while the death rate rose to 8.04 per 1,000—the highest since 1968—contributing to a fourth consecutive year of population decline, with about 3.39 million fewer people and a total population around 1.4 billion. Experts call the pace of decline striking and note it continues despite the end of the one‑child policy (introduced in the late 1970s) and later shifts to two‑child (2015) and three‑child (2021) limits. The one‑child era left long-term effects: a skewed sex ratio, fewer younger caregivers for an aging population, and documented abuses such as forced abortions and child abandonment.Beijing has tried to reverse the trend with pro‑birth campaigns and policy changes; recently it imposed new taxes on some contraceptives and promoted family‑amiable messaging. High child‑rearing costs, ongoing economic problems (including a real‑estate crisis), and persistent societal factors have limited the effectiveness of pronatalist measures. with over 20% of the population already aged 60 or older and UN projections warning of a dramatically older population by 2100, China faces major demographic and economic challenges ahead.
China’s birth rate hit rock bottom, one decade after it announced the end of its one-child policy, multiple outlets reported Monday.
Total births in China plummeted to 5.63 per 1,000 people in 2025, marking a record low since the Chinese Communist Party officially took power in 1949. At the same time, the country’s death rate increased to 8.04 per 1,000 people, the highest level since 1968, according to multiple reports citing government data.
Meanwhile, the country’s population fell for the fourth straight year, dropping 3.39 million to hit 1.4 billion by the end of 2025, BBC News reported.
“The pace of the decline is striking, particularly in the absence of major shocks,” Yue Su, principal economist at Economist Intelligence Unit, told CNBC on Monday.
The newly released demographic data comes as China has grappled with a continually declining population in recent years.
China introduced its controversial nationwide one-child policy in the late 1970s in an effort to decrease the country’s then-massive population, according to the National Library of Medicine. In 2015, China announced it had decided to scrap the policy and replace it with a two-child limit, which lasted until 2021 in favor of a three-child policy.
While the one-child policy officially ended in January 2016, experts have warned that it has contributed to ongoing demographic issues such as a heavily skewed ratio of men to women, and having a shortage of younger relatives able to provide care for a continuously aging population, The New York Times reported in October 2015.
Additionally, China’s one-child policy sometimes resulted in forced abortions and mothers’ deaths, the Los Angeles Times reported in June 2012. In the 1980s, the policy also led to some parents in China either abandoning their daughters, committing infanticide, or giving them away, which partly contributed to Chinese babies — primarily girls — being adopted in the West, NPR reported in February 2016.
Moreover, since China switched to the three-child policy beginning in 2021, the Chinese government has been promoting national campaigns in an effort to create a “pro-birth culture” amid its continuously aging and declining population, CNN reported in August 2024. People over the age of 60 now make up over 20 percent of China’s total population of 1.4 billion people, and could account for a whopping half of the population by 2100, CNN reported on Jan. 1, citing projections from the United Nations.
Beijing has recently begun introducing new taxes on condoms, birth control pills, and other contraceptives in an effort to bolster China’s population, Fortune reported on Jan. 16. China is notably one of the most expensive countries in the world for families to raise a child, BBC News reported in December 2025, citing data from a 2024 report by the YuWa Population Research Institute in Beijing.
China has also faced a spate of economic struggles in recent years, such as a major real estate crisis.
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