2025年12月8日 星期一

Counting the Missing: A demographic reckoning of China’s one-child era (1980–2016)


“Counting the Missing: A demographic reckoning of China’s one-child era (1980–2016)”

Between 1980 and 2016 China pursued a suite of population-control measures that, collectively and controversially, sharply reduced the number of births. Using a simple, transparent comparison — asking how many births China would have had if it experienced the global crude birth rate in each year from 1980 through 2016 — the arithmetic points to hundreds of millions of “missing” births over the period. A mid-range estimate is roughly 260 million fewer births than the global-rate baseline would imply, with a plausible uncertainty band from about 150M to 400M depending on the assumptions. (World Bank Open Data)

Two numbers stand out. China’s population was already large in 1980 (≈981 million). And the world’s crude birth rate was higher then than in later decades. When a nation of that scale reduces births below the global average for decades, the cumulative difference becomes enormous. That arithmetic does not, by itself, prove intent or tally every forced procedure — but it forces a moral and policy question into stark terms: tens to hundreds of millions of human lives that were not born.

Why this gap emerged is complicated. Fertility is shaped by economic opportunity, urbanization, female education, access to contraception, cultural norms, and public policy. China’s government actively promoted small-family norms from the 1970s, and in 1979–1980 formalized limits often summarized as the “one-child policy” for the ethnic Han majority. Enforcement included incentives and penalties administered at the local level; documented practices in some periods and places included fines, forced sterilisations and abortions, and intense administrative pressure. These enforcement realities — and their human costs — are described in contemporary reporting and later investigations. (WIRED)

But the demographic effects are not merely historical trivia. The missing births reshape labor markets, dependency ratios, pension sustainability, and the balance of generations. China now faces an aging population and, in recent years, falling annual births despite policy relaxations (two-child policy in 2016, then three-child and supportive measures later). The long shadow of a multi-decade fertility decline cannot be erased overnight: a birth skipped in 1985 cannot be made up later. (National Bureau of Statistics of China)

A few policy lessons:

  • Counts matter: policy should be evaluated with transparent metrics. Crude birth-rate arithmetic shows the scale of demographic change in ways that raw rhetoric hides. (DataBank)

  • Rights & methods: population policy that reduces births by persuasion, education, and economic support is very different in moral terms from coercive measures. Historical records show both voluntary and coercive elements in China’s program; a clear accounting is necessary for justice and future trust. (TIME)

  • Long horizons: demography moves on decades. Reversing an aging trend requires sustained pro-family economic, social, and gender-equity policies — not just regulatory permission to have more children. (Levy Economics Institute of Bard College)

Finally, numbers do not substitute for stories. Each counted birth is a human life; each “missing” birth from the arithmetic above represents not a statistic but a constellation of family choices, state pressures, and historical forces. The calculation here — careful, documented, but inevitably approximate — should not be read as a moral verdict measured only in millions. It is, however, a prompt: to record, to remember, and to learn.


Method & sources 

  • Baseline population and yearly China mid-year populations: World Bank / UN population series. (World Bank Open Data)

  • China annual births & crude birth rate: China Statistical Yearbooks / World Bank / FRED (World Bank indicator SP.DYN.CBRT.IN for China). (Wikipedia)

  • Global crude birth-rate baseline: World Bank / UN / Our World in Data (long-run crude birth rate series). (Our World in Data)

  • Contemporary reporting and investigations on one-child policy enforcement and human-rights impacts: Wired, Time, Reuters and academic reviews. (WIRED)