China's population
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Following are the results from the advance tabulation on the geographic
distribution of population from the fifth national population census of
China:
|Region |Population (million) |
|Beijing Municipality |13.82 |
|Tianjin Municipality |10.01 |
|Hebei Province |67.44 |
|Shanxi Province |32.97 |
|Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region|23.76 |
|Liaoning Province |42.38 |
|Jilin Province |27.28 |
|Heilongjiang Province |36.89 |
|Shanghai Municipality |16.74 |
|Jiangsu Province |74.38 |
|Zhejiang Province |46.77 |
|Anhui Province |59.86 |
|Fujian Province |34.71 |
|(excluding the population in | |
|Jinmen and Mazu and a few other | |
|islands) | |
|Jiangxi Province |41.40 |
|Shandong Province |90.79 |
|Henan Province |92.56 |
|Hubei Province |60.28 |
|Hunan Province |64.40 |
|Guangdong Province |86.42 |
|Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region|44.89 |
|Hainan Province |7.87 |
|Chongqing Municipality |30.90 |
|Sichuan Province |83.29 |
|Guizhou Province |35.25 |
|Yunnan Province |42.88 |
|Tibet Autonomous Region |2.62 |
|Shaanxi Province |36.05 |
|Gansu Province |25.62 |
|Qinghai Province |5.18 |
|Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region |5.62 |
|Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region|19.25 |
|Hongkong Special Administrative |6.78 |
|Region | |
|Macao Special Administrative |0.44 |
|Region | |
|Taiwan Province and Jinmen, Mazu|22.28 |
|and a few other islands of | |
|Fujian Province | |
|Servicemen |2.50 |
Because of complex natural conditions, the population of China is quite
unevenly distributed. Population density varies strikingly, with the
greatest contrast occurring between the eastern half of China and the lands
of the west and the north-west. Exceptionally high population densities
occur in the Yangtze Delta, in the Pearl River Delta, and on the Ch'eng-tu
Plain of the western Szechwan Basin. Most of the high-density areas are
coterminous with the alluvial plains on which intensive agriculture is
centred.
In contrast, the isolated, extensive western and frontier regions, which are much larger than any European nation, are sparsely populated.
Extensive uninhabited areas include the extremely high northern part of
Tibet, the sandy wastes of the central Tarim and eastern Dzungarian basins
in Sinkiang, and the barren desert and mountains east of Lop Nor.
In the 1950s the government became increasingly aware of the importance of the frontier regions and initiated a drive for former members of the military and young intellectuals to settle there. Consequently, the population has increased, following the construction of new railways and highways that traverse the wasteland; a number of small mining and industrial towns have also sprung up.
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INTERNAL MIGRATION
Migrations have occurred often throughout the history of China.
Sometimes they took place because a famine or political disturbance would
cause the depopulation of an area already intensively cultivated, after
which people in adjacent crowded regions would move in to occupy the
deserted land. Sometime between 1640 and 1646 a peasant rebellion broke out
in Szechwan, and there was a great loss of life. People from Hupeh and
Shensi then entered Szechwan to fill the vacuum, and the movement continued
until the 19th century. Again, during the middle of the 19th century, the
Taiping Rebellion caused another large-scale disruption of population. Many
people in the Lower Yangtze were massacred by the opposing armies, and the
survivors suffered from starvation. After the defeat of the rebellion, people from Hupeh, Hunan, and Honan moved into the depopulated areas of
Kiangsu. Anhwei. and Chekiang, where farmland was lying uncultivated for
want of labour. Similar examples are provided by the Nien Rebellion in the
Huai River region in the 1850s and '60s, the Muslim rebellions in Shensi
and Kansu in the 1860s and '70s, and the great Shensi and Shansi famine of
1877-78.
In modern history the domestic movement of the Han to Manchuria (now
known as the Northeast) is the most Migration significant. Even before
the establishment of the Ch'ing to dynasty in 1644, Manchu soldiers
launched raids into Manchuria North China and captured Han labourers, who were then obliged to settle in Manchuria. In 1668 the area was closed
to further Han migration by an Imperial decree, but this ban was never
effectively enforced. By 1850. Han settlers had secured a position of
dominance in their colonisation of Manchuria. The ban was later partially'
lifted, partly because the Manchu rulers were harassed by disturbances
among the teeming population of China proper and partly because the Russian
Empire time and again tried to invade sparsely populated and thus weakly
defended Manchuria. The ban was finally removed altogether in 1878, but
settlement was encouraged only after 1900. The influx of people into
Manchuria was especially pronounced after 1923, and incoming farmers
rapidly brought a vast area of virgin prairie under cultivation. About two-
thirds of the immigrants entered Manchuria by sea, and one-third came
overland. Because of the severity of the winter weather, migration in the
early stage was highly seasonal, usually starting in February and
continuing through the spring. After the autumn harvest a large proportion
of the farmers returned south. As Manchuria developed into the principal
industrial region of China, however, large urban centres arose, and the
nature of the migration changed. No longer was the movement primarily one
of agricultural resettlement; instead it became essentially a rural-to-
urban movement of interregional magnitude. After 1949 the new government's
efforts to foster planned migration into interior and border regions
produced noticeable results. Although the total number of people involved
in such migrations is not known, it has been estimated that by 1980 about
25 to 35 percent of the population of such regions and provinces as Inner
Mongolia, Sinkiang, Heilungkiang. and Tsinghai consisted of recent
migrants, and migration had raised the percentage of Han in Sinkiang from
about 10 to 40 percent of the total. Efforts to control the growth of large
cities led to the resettlement of 20,000,000 urbanites in the countryside
after the failure of the Great Leap Forward and of 17,-000,000 urban-
educated youths in the decade after 1968. Within the next decade, however, the majority of these "rusticated youths" were allowed to return to the
cities, and new migration from rural areas pushed urban population totals
upward once again.
China Sticks to Population Control Policy in New Century
China will continue its efforts to control the growth of the population
in the 21 century, said Zhang Weiqing, minister of the State Family
Planning Commission on November 2, 2000.
At the annual board meeting of the Partners in Population and
Development by South-South Cooperation, which opened Thursday in Beijing,
Zhang said that keeping a low birth rate is the key task of China' s family
planning program in the coming decade.
He said that China has made it a goal to keep the population below 1.4 billion until 2010 on the basis of scientific feasibility study.
In order to realise the goal, China is persisting in popularisation and education about family planning and contraception, and it will make efforts to build a perfect population control system suitable for China's situation, said Zhang.
According to Zhang, population will continue to be a pressing issue for
China in the 21st century. The annual net population growth will be more
than 10 million at the start of the new century. The population will not
decline until it reaches a peak of 1.6 billion in the middle of the 21st
century, Zhang said.
At present, China has a large work-age population, which puts a heavy burden on employment. The work-age population will peak at 900 million in the coming decades.
In addition, Zhang predicts that the number of senior citizens over the age of 60 in China will reach 130 million at the end of this year, and will exceed 357 million in 2030, and 439 million in 2050, or a quarter of the total population.
Zhang said that China will stick to family planning policy for a long time depending on future population situation.
President on Population Control, Resources and Environmental Protection
Population control, resources and environmental protection will be
three crucial issues in China's march toward becoming a great power in the
new century, President Jiang Zemin told a seminar held by the Communist
Party of China Central Committee Sunday.
Jiang said that governmental decisions concerning the country's population control, resources and environmental protection demand concerted efforts and cooperation from all walks of life.
Jiang warned that although marked progress had been made during the
1996-2000 period, China is still facing many problems and challenges
concerning population, resources and environmental protection in the coming
years.
"These issues are directly related to the country's overall
development. Failure in handling them may postpone the achievement of
China's set goals in terms of social and economic development," said Jiang.
Jiang said that the next few years will be a crucial stage for China to stabilise its birth rate at the current low level and improve population quality.
When dealing with population issues, governments at all levels should better serve the people's needs, and turn the country's birth control efforts into a cause benefiting China's huge populace, Jiang remarked.
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