9月25日 (星期三)30°C 75
日期:
《 上一篇       下一篇 》

China's retirement age reforms not enough to fix pension headache

24/9/2024 7:25
        China's move to raise retirement ages is a starting point to plug gaping pension deficits and bolster a shrinking workforce but more pain lies ahead as the economy slows, making further reforms urgent, say economists and demographers.
        
        Aging populations are a global phenomenon, but the issue is particularly stark in China due to the legacy of its one-child-policy, which was in place for three decades and has exacerbated its demographic challenges.
        
        China’s number of births dropped to 9 million last year and the United Nations forecasts China's working age population will decline by nearly 40% by 2050 from 2010 if fertility rates remain at current levels.
        
        Both older and younger workers have expressed worries about the changes as policymakers grapple with widespread discrepancies between rural and urban pensions, maintaining public stability and high youth unemployment.
        
        



|



回主頁 關於我們使用條款及細則版權及免責聲明私隱政策 聯絡我們

Copyright 2024© Metro Broadcast Corporation Limited. All rights reserved.