China's Shrinking Population: How Will It Cope With Fewer Workers? | Insight | Full Episode

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  • čas přidán 14. 05. 2024
  • China recorded a drop in population for the first time in six decades, an outcome of its One-Child Policy. It is the first country to “get old before it gets rich”. It is a problem that President Xi Jinping has noted in several speeches.
    Even if the government is successful in encouraging Chinese citizens to have more babies, it will still face an aging population in the short and medium term. Already, the country is experiencing a shortage of workers in some industries.
    Could external and internal migration, or even raising the retirement age, be solutions? And if not, can Beijing rely on robots and A.I to make up the shortfall?
    00:00 Introduction
    1:37 Why is China's population declining?
    07:13 Fewer workers: foreign talent exodus
    13:18 Can African labour help increase workforce in China?
    24:55 Internal migration: engine of growth no more
    30:35 China's apathetic young workers: productivity troubles
    35:59 Could raising retirement age help labour shortage?
    43:07 Robotics & AI to boost productivity in China
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    • Insight
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Komentáře • 1,3K

  • @chriswatson1698
    @chriswatson1698 Před rokem +724

    Those who pretend concern about a 'worker shortage' are really concerned about a lack of consumers, not workers.

    • @ericphua2359
      @ericphua2359 Před rokem

      China economy will shrink for the next 20 years. They needs to down size their army and the world will be safer.

    • @therealscot2491
      @therealscot2491 Před rokem +104

      Also don't want to pay decent wages.

    • @MrVaidas82
      @MrVaidas82 Před rokem +51

      Well 98 percent of those "customers" are not consumers. Can factory worker buy and expensive car what he produces ? They cry only of because one problem that there will be less cheap labour force and profits will shrink. Economy and competetivnes is thing that few percent benefit from and others get peanuts just to get by.

    • @LateNightSummerRain
      @LateNightSummerRain Před rokem +16

      It was actually both lol

    • @humdedum723
      @humdedum723 Před rokem +3

      Seriously lol

  • @cocs88715
    @cocs88715 Před rokem +161

    The practice of having children has become more of a burden for almost every young family. Imagine coming home from work late at night, dreaded and tired, sex would probably be one of the last things on their mind.

    • @dm-jf5uu
      @dm-jf5uu Před 9 měsíci +3

      Yup and who wants kids if you have no place to live

  • @user-ti7me6yv7w
    @user-ti7me6yv7w Před rokem +398

    Otherwise what do you want? Raising a kid to study 24 hours just enough to get into a half decent college. And then graduate, and then work for a company that has a boss claiming working 996 is a blessing to human?

    • @vijay20
      @vijay20 Před rokem

      don't bother exporting this china work ethic (lack of a better word, indeed the opposite of ethic) to us!

    • @Kash-is-King
      @Kash-is-King Před rokem +28

      That’s pretty much the whole of East Asia (incl. fast growing South East Asia) these days

    • @sps6
      @sps6 Před 10 měsíci +16

      I lie flat

    • @charleschoy2327
      @charleschoy2327 Před 10 měsíci +9

      With exception of the best brains, college graduates will not be in great demand in the future. Great demand in skill workers, skill technician, hands-on engineers. Their technical education start at Gr 9. They'll be the backbone of multi-billions chip plants, internet hubs, heavy industries, even AI, etc.

    • @anticommunist-sg3cn
      @anticommunist-sg3cn Před 8 měsíci +2

      College isn't necessary. Why would you subject your kid to that?

  • @jkim1316
    @jkim1316 Před 11 měsíci +53

    This is the situation all over the world. Cost of living is too high, the rich have all the money. No one can afford to raise a family.

    • @samsangota2563
      @samsangota2563 Před 5 měsíci

      Ok be ready to become Muslim. They are growing 6 to 11 kids per wife And some of them have four wives.

  • @br0wnskiin22
    @br0wnskiin22 Před rokem +67

    Young people are telling the story. That old “ mentality “ work till you die is no longer what they will stand for . Why work hard when I won’t make enough to ever buy a home or feel comfortable to start a family . It makes sense

    • @dasit6034
      @dasit6034 Před rokem +14

      not to mention the things a person has to learn in their lifetime, and it keeps adding every year. things are getting more and more complicated in general, 100 or even 50 years ago you could study and be set for life, now u pretty much have to be constantly improving to compete

  • @rainyseason1975
    @rainyseason1975 Před 7 měsíci +16

    So average humans are reduced to just "workers" ...for the rich. That's sick.

  • @helenqiao4084
    @helenqiao4084 Před rokem +500

    Brilliant doco. However, one of the most important underlining cause was not mentioned: income inequality. Young people don't want to have families, young people don't want to work hard because they are not being treated as valued workers or even person. The media boss is hilarious talking about his young workers don't want to work hard. Of course they don't when they are getting paid peanuts to be on-call 24/7. None of the polices will make any different, and the society will die and die fast when it does not value or respect people on a fundamental level.

    • @ericphua2359
      @ericphua2359 Před rokem +41

      Well said.

    • @johnlacey3857
      @johnlacey3857 Před rokem

      The communist CCP doesn’t respect anyone or anything except itself. May it crash and burn in excruciating pain, never to rise again.

    • @lucyfiniarel2347
      @lucyfiniarel2347 Před rokem +26

      Sounded like a typical boomer complaining about the strawberry generation.

    • @kexusun3107
      @kexusun3107 Před rokem +7

      so young people should teach their Boss how to be a good boss. I really do not think it is a good idea to work hard in a small company in China if you want to be rich enough to get a decent and stable life. maybe working hard to run a business should be a good way, after all, the economy in China is still very strong.

    • @ericphua2359
      @ericphua2359 Před rokem

      @@kexusun3107 not really, China economy never been worst. We can see this clearly from the properties crisis and 40% youths unemployment. Chinese savings have gone up multiple fold. This show chinese people are not spending and confidence are at it weakest. Not wise to dump money into a blackhole, you will loose your pants. Chinese companies moved to Vietnam and other SEA countries, that show how bad things were with China economy.

  • @glenclarkchidley3637
    @glenclarkchidley3637 Před rokem +130

    So easy for people who work in air conditioned buildings and have never done an honest day of labor to decide to raise the retirement age.

    • @simlylife9718
      @simlylife9718 Před rokem +16

      People who don't work in air conditioned buildings in China usually don't have pension thus no such thing as retirement.

    • @glenclarkchidley3637
      @glenclarkchidley3637 Před rokem +2

      @@simlylife9718
      Agreed

    • @AdaWong-eq7vs
      @AdaWong-eq7vs Před 11 měsíci +5

      一毛钱退休金都没有 何来退休年龄一说 监狱养老才是王道

    • @jessicareynolds8011
      @jessicareynolds8011 Před 8 měsíci +3

      Just because it's not physical work doesn't mean it's not work

  • @jaylewis5673
    @jaylewis5673 Před rokem +68

    I feel like if they wanted a good opinion on how to fix these issues, they should have asked the people it would affect the most. They interviewed one young person,, then a bunch of old heads who are in charge of everything, and won't have to face the repercussions of the decisions they are making for everyone else. Then the older generations are saying "they are just too lazy" and the younger generation is saying, "well what's the point if it won't do me any better in the future?" They are literally telling them the problem, and they refuse to listen. Until they do listen, there won't be any kind of actual change.

    • @randomnyss2011
      @randomnyss2011 Před rokem +10

      Yeah... Now I totally relate why ancient european mythology was all about sons killing their fathers.. seems less gruesome now...

    • @GeorgeChuy
      @GeorgeChuy Před rokem

      really not a conflict between the young and the old, but a matter of how decisions are generally made in China. Public opinions are ever the more ignored, pervasive disgruntling is banned and checked on internet. Feedback set aside and nothing towards solution will ever take place at all.

    • @irondragonmaiden
      @irondragonmaiden Před 11 měsíci +7

      Yep, that boss' attitude screams "oh, my workers are just happy with simply being able to eat and drink well with some shopping every once in a while (AKA just happy living with the necessities with some nice things every once in a while) means that I can't exploit my workers' dreams and ambitions to make them work harder for peanuts in order to attain an illusive dream."
      They're really angry that we've adjusted our expectations to meet reality and refuse to play a rigged game

  • @troyhung4307
    @troyhung4307 Před rokem +104

    If youth unemployment is over 10%, shrinking population shouldn't be an issue 🤷

    • @SunilMeena-do7xn
      @SunilMeena-do7xn Před rokem +14

      Unemployment is usually in high value jobs while lack of labor force is in low value and manufacturing jobs. So it's problematic.

    • @dasit6034
      @dasit6034 Před rokem +5

      @@SunilMeena-do7xn if theres a lack of labor in the "low value" jobs maybe they should be increased in value

    • @irondragonmaiden
      @irondragonmaiden Před 11 měsíci +13

      @@SunilMeena-do7xn The entire reason manufacturing jobs and other "low value" jobs have a shortage is because the salaries are horrible. I mean, I get that the Fabian fellow thinks that manufacturing pays well, but those numbers aren't enough for living decently in even a medium city. The era of "we can pay these blue-collared workers peanuts because there's thousands that are desperate to accept shitty working conditions" is dead. Adapt and make those jobs high-paying or die.

    • @richardwills-woodward5340
      @richardwills-woodward5340 Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@irondragonmaiden You can't because the manufacturing goes to cheaper labour countries (as it is doing). The industries that are uncompetitive with export based products must now die - and they are. The domestic manufacturing companies - they can up the salaries but there has to be demand. Where is it? Salaries are sideways at best and consumer demand is poor at the moment. I agree, China will not collapse very soon, but for the next 25 years it will face chronic issues and move sideways as an economy too.

    • @j2174
      @j2174 Před 9 měsíci +8

      Youth unemployment is now greater than 21%

  • @garywoodgrw
    @garywoodgrw Před rokem +79

    I've lived in China for 10 years, and the apathy is something I have also noticed amongst the youth. More and more people, of all generations, appear to be more cynical about the future now. A far cry from 10 years ago when people were so much more optimistic and upbeat. I have family in China so these looming problems do concern me.

    • @TWisDOG1
      @TWisDOG1 Před rokem +10

      US dollar and the western world is on the way to collapse obviously in 2023. All Chinese around me are very optimistic about China's future especially this year. And Chinese people are more optimistic about the future than that of 10 years ago because we are witnessing China's industrilization is leading the world and eclapse the Western one.

    • @span6947
      @span6947 Před 10 měsíci +6

      In your dream man

    • @tropicanacitrus
      @tropicanacitrus Před 10 měsíci +5

      No, people are more pessimistic than 10 years ago. The best era for the young in China is from 1990 to 2012 and also the relatively free times.

    • @garywoodgrw
      @garywoodgrw Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@span6947 Me?

    • @monikam9069
      @monikam9069 Před 9 měsíci

      @@TWisDOG1 Yes Chinese destroyed Canada. None of you in the region can be trusted. And the fools with your Asian kids and wives -stay there

  • @NatalieLawrence
    @NatalieLawrence Před rokem +87

    I wonder if the Nigerian commentator has actually thought about what they’ve said. That essentially it’s OK to pay Africans less than half for the same job because “they’re happy with it”. Then in 5-10 years’ time, he’ll be complaining about pay equality and they can just pay this clip back at him. Equal pay or the highest rate as possible should be the aim, not “pay me little and I’ll be OK” ☹️

    • @randomnyss2011
      @randomnyss2011 Před rokem +1

      Africans themselves were major slave traders, now they blame others for their misfortunes.

    • @roxanartventures
      @roxanartventures Před rokem +4

      sad situation but because of competition people have to cope

    • @irondragonmaiden
      @irondragonmaiden Před 11 měsíci +4

      Yep, that mentality is what makes manufacturing jobs as being seen as "low value," because the salaries are low. Sorry, not sorry, but people don't go to work for the sake of their health, they go to work because they have bills to pay in order to live. If the job doesn't pay you enough, then it becomes low value.
      If they want more people working in these jobs, shut up and pay them properly.

    • @adk5997
      @adk5997 Před 11 měsíci +2

      @@irondragonmaiden exactly. But the buyers want max profits for their pockets. they dont care that they are exploiting those workers. So is only normal there is push back now. Everything is more expensive, so those workers won’t be able to survive and have to push. It is all based on their work, whole business. No matter what anyone says about ceo of some company in Europe, there would be nothing without these workers. if their work is paid for them to just barely exist, that is very bad

    • @johncharles304
      @johncharles304 Před 10 měsíci +2

      He needs to return to the country whence he came! We the Chinese do NOT desire him to be here!!!

  • @robezy0
    @robezy0 Před rokem +237

    CNA never disappoints! One thing to mention is that raising the retirement age is only a temporary solution by keeping China's "baby boomer generation" employed a bit longer. But the generation in their 40s is already smaller, so the work force is going to shrink either way, just not as fast and not as early. Pretty much all developed countries struggle with this as well, but no other country has to deal with such a high total number of missing workers as China.

    • @ericphua2359
      @ericphua2359 Před rokem +17

      Not a problem currently, they still have 40% unemployed graduates and youths. More jobs are needed now, not workers.

    • @robezy0
      @robezy0 Před rokem +23

      @@ericphua2359 I think those are two different phenomena. On one hand, you're right that China has too few tech and government jobs for university graduates. But meanwhile China also needs more workers in sectors like agriculture and manufacturing. For the latter China's MoE forcasts 30 million job vacancies by 2025.

    • @ericphua2359
      @ericphua2359 Před rokem

      @@robezy0 LOL, China manufacturing do not needs more workers now, what they needs are more orders from US and Europe. But US and Europe try diversified their supply chain. So China hope Russia can make up the difference, but pootin is a disappointment. With robotics and automation, manufacturing don't needs more workers. Even Foxconn moving production line to Vietnam and India, because of cost savings. Tens of thousands of manufacturing workers becomes jobless, where got lack of workers? Many go into food delivery, cause earning in this sector to drop until they barely survive. The focus now should be jobs, jobs and jobs.

    • @ericphua2359
      @ericphua2359 Před rokem +4

      @@robezy0 LOL, forecast 30 millions jobs available? You go and ask the Chinese believe or not, I have no comments. Land of lies.

    • @robezy0
      @robezy0 Před rokem +12

      @@ericphua2359 this estimate is literally from the Chinese government 🤦‍♂️

  • @badrolazim1381
    @badrolazim1381 Před rokem +102

    China: High unemployment rate.
    Also China: We need more labors.

    • @consp51
      @consp51 Před rokem +16

      Need blue labors

    • @ericphua2359
      @ericphua2359 Před rokem

      ​@@consp51 more like they needs more slave.

    • @deezeed2817
      @deezeed2817 Před rokem +17

      The high unemployment rate is the young white collar sector, The manufacturing sector is short of workers.

    • @consp51
      @consp51 Před rokem

      @@deezeed2817 Too many colleges students.
      China should start importing blue workers.

    • @ericphua2359
      @ericphua2359 Před rokem +2

      @@deezeed2817 manufacturing supply chain moving to Vietnam, no more shortage of workers.

  • @ryerye9019
    @ryerye9019 Před rokem +143

    Popping the housing bubble, correcting overvalued/hyperinflated real estate prices, will solve the affordability crisis for young people. However, governments will continue to keep them inflated because that is where older generations store their wealth. It's a question of which generation is favored and more important to society: The young who invest in the future by raising a family or the elders who hold political and economic power.

    • @charleschoy2327
      @charleschoy2327 Před rokem

      Housing bubble burst already. Price is falling rapidly. Foreign reporters are predicting doom again, financial hurricane.

    • @nyanyamero
      @nyanyamero Před rokem +33

      The older generations will never relinquish their hold on power and that's a fact. Not just in asia but all over the world.

    • @zoeydeu2261
      @zoeydeu2261 Před rokem +26

      Yup it's happening all over the world. Here in Australia we have a housing supply crisis but the older generations with houses refuse to let apartments to be built on their street (for fear of devaluing their property). Government isn't building enough subsidized housing, and rents/mortgages are rising due to interest rates, causing the poorer members of society to become homeless. The older generations have multiple properties (bought when prices were cheap) and many rent theirs out to Airbnb, making the housing crisis worse.

    • @TTW-lp3jc
      @TTW-lp3jc Před rokem +1

      They won’t do that, because they get too much from real estate.

    • @charleschoy2327
      @charleschoy2327 Před rokem +2

      @@TTW-lp3jc Very true for leaders who need votes. Older people always vote. Young people vote less.

  • @catsandsound
    @catsandsound Před 8 měsíci +18

    I don't know know why people always see shrinking populations as a problem. In a crowded city you soon realize that too many people isn't actually a good thing for anyone....

    • @paulatobler8354
      @paulatobler8354 Před měsícem

      Because they don’t really care about quality of life, they just care about whether they can sustain infinite growth of profits to sustain capitalism. To have profits keep going up year after year, you need more and more consumers and more and more workers so that those workers will have to accept low wages. Not enough consumers don’t buy enough and labor shortages mean having to pay more to get people to work for you instead of paying them less and increasing the profits.

  • @dangkung9022
    @dangkung9022 Před rokem +110

    Not only in China, Korea and Japan too. Their housing markets are significantly declined due to growing aging populations.

    • @Itried20takennames
      @Itried20takennames Před rokem +11

      Sure, others have population decline and real estate bubbles, but the current housing bubble in parts of China is pretty extreme, with housing costing something like 8 times the average workers annual salary in Japan, and 35-50 times the average yearly wage in some areas of China.
      And China is continuing to add to the oversupply of huge empty apartment buildings of questionable safety and quality, as land sales and rapid, mass building are a huge part of taxes/government income, so the bubble keeps inflating, but can’t indefinitely.

    • @chrillsimslovesgretathunbe9771
      @chrillsimslovesgretathunbe9771 Před rokem +7

      India, bangladesh, indonesia, Philippines can't relate 🤣

    • @pravynaidu7762
      @pravynaidu7762 Před rokem +1

      Then import some Indian population

    • @SL-sd3sg
      @SL-sd3sg Před rokem +11

      Like animals, we won’t procreate if resources are lean or oppressive.

    • @supernova7966
      @supernova7966 Před rokem

      Pakistan, North Korea and Indonesia will rule the world.

  • @sirel3272
    @sirel3272 Před rokem +41

    what do you expect from a country whose main culture is 9-9-6? Did you even think the people who are overworked to death would still want to raise a family? where do you think they will get the time for it and also the money? Since the pay is comparable to peanuts. The problem is too obvious and is biting them in the face they just don't want to change it.

    • @cacateeah
      @cacateeah Před rokem +15

      Agree. I think it’s actually should be a crime to bring any innocent new soul to that land if the parents know their baby will grow up being hyper-stressed during school and could not make basic living without 996 after graduation

    • @nickl5658
      @nickl5658 Před rokem +1

      Elon makes his people sign a contract to work 80 hours a week. So 9-9-6 is only 72 hours a week.

    • @ericphua2359
      @ericphua2359 Před rokem

      @@nickl5658 US Corp are most kind to Chinese.

    • @randomnyss2011
      @randomnyss2011 Před rokem +1

      ​@@nickl5658 those contract are made in such a way cuz those specific job roles require that amount of dedication, and in return the pay is really good. I don't think for normal worker it makes sense to work sacrificing every other aspects of life i.e. 996 with nothing in return

    • @Brxwn9
      @Brxwn9 Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@cacateeah Exactly. And this applies to people all over and in the US. You are sadistic to breed children despite knowing that the environment is unstable and unsafe simply from your own selfishness for another life.

  • @missteeny1638
    @missteeny1638 Před 9 měsíci +6

    Every country: we have housing shortages, food insecurity, wage stagnation, a crumbling middle class
    Also every country: why aren’t people having babies?

  • @celestialstar124
    @celestialstar124 Před rokem +12

    Singapore is also aging population so this serve as a reminder for us too.
    Thanks for covering this

  • @beaulong
    @beaulong Před rokem +63

    I was there from 2009 to 2012... golden years... really awesome time... the govt and business structure has shown its true and ugly colors now.

    • @lowwastehighmelanin
      @lowwastehighmelanin Před rokem

      It's seriously so sad.

    • @ericphua2359
      @ericphua2359 Před rokem

      It is a system problem.

    • @alisv4817
      @alisv4817 Před rokem +3

      Does Xi Xiping have to do with it? Given that he was elected as President in 2012 it seems that his policies and rule has created these problems..

  • @fgjnndfhnk
    @fgjnndfhnk Před rokem +16

    who want to give birth to children with the high unemployment ,high education cost ,high prices of house even the strange engagement culture?

  • @myty4847
    @myty4847 Před 10 měsíci +12

    More population just means cheaper labor. As a human and as a part of the workforce, why would anyone wanna be cheap labor just to boost a country's economy and fame. People who were born already had no choice but at least they can choose to not let their offspring experience non-human work environment and low pay

  • @Tammissa
    @Tammissa Před rokem +32

    Very good documentary. Very informative. Thank you.

  • @eliso5973
    @eliso5973 Před rokem +15

    China doesn't have enough jobs for it's people, so there's nothing to worry about. The unemployment rate of university graduates is 20%, this means shrinking population is not a bad thing at all.

  • @echoliu8060
    @echoliu8060 Před rokem +64

    I have a brother while other families only have one child. The price of apartment is too high now, they force people to buy it, every new family can't afford it in marriageable age without their parents' support. Under both son preference and economic pressure, my parents won't give me any help although they have three apartments. It's hard to give my children common level education and safe living environment in China. If you are common class, the more children you have, the more rate your children don't willing and able to have next generation. They will have less competitive. For people like me, have only one or none child is not just a choice, but a result. There is little protection for women in China, including equity of family resources, recognition of the value of reproduction, no such law exists. That's one of the reasons why females don't want more children. Also, men have high pressure in economic, some of them don't want children too.

    • @blossom1290
      @blossom1290 Před rokem +1

      Yea true they put the high pressure on men to do all work and get rid of the women because they see no value in them.😬

    • @chrillsimslovesgretathunbe9771
      @chrillsimslovesgretathunbe9771 Před rokem +2

      Go to rural china where 6 children is the norm

    • @echoliu8060
      @echoliu8060 Před rokem +10

      @@chrillsimslovesgretathunbe9771 In fact, rural families cannot afford to raise 6 children, except for the kind of beast that chains women as a fertility tool. Before raising children, parents should consider how many children they can afford. It is not funny to only pursue quantity.

    • @randomnyss2011
      @randomnyss2011 Před rokem

      ​@@chrillsimslovesgretathunbe9771 and rural China has problem of abandoned kids left to raise themselves..

    • @bchompoo
      @bchompoo Před 13 dny

      In my country there's no pressure on men having to have a house to get married. Couples buy a house of their own when they marry, or rent until they want to move.

  • @kenyup7936
    @kenyup7936 Před rokem +63

    Can you imagine what is life like in China, it’s packed everywhere, in weekends you have a long queue for the dinner, wait in at least one hour, so for me, population shrinking is not a bad thing

    • @kaym7704
      @kaym7704 Před rokem

      The problem is that their economy relies on a large amount of cheap labor and with all those people aging..whose going to take care of them.

    • @extremepsyche3135
      @extremepsyche3135 Před rokem +26

      Economic growth is one thing - individual happiness is a separate issue.

    • @lowwastehighmelanin
      @lowwastehighmelanin Před rokem

      Actually I have a friend teaching English in Shanghai that has countered that argument. The population decline is palpable.

    • @CIA.Langley
      @CIA.Langley Před rokem

      You are a bonafide moron.

    • @normanocampo4466
      @normanocampo4466 Před rokem

      Who will TAKE care of the old Chinese people, and Chinese dogs?😆😁😄

  • @MustacheCashStash125
    @MustacheCashStash125 Před 6 měsíci +5

    CNA : China’s population is declining
    Shows people packed into subways like sardines

  • @RayMak
    @RayMak Před rokem +14

    It’s scary to start a family in China

    • @lktan224
      @lktan224 Před rokem +4

      It’s even more scary in Singapore 🇸🇬. Education is a nightmare.

    • @JimmyWayne7
      @JimmyWayne7 Před rokem

      it's even more scary in USA coz the LGBTQ lol

    • @sashamoore9691
      @sashamoore9691 Před rokem +1

      @@lktan224 but as bad as in China. Y’all suck

  • @Emperors_Deathangel
    @Emperors_Deathangel Před rokem +10

    No idea what to say but a dude said that youths in China were facing massive jobless crisis.

  • @ric6074
    @ric6074 Před rokem +6

    Shrinking population will relieved the pressure on infrastructure and economy.

  • @mouthspills
    @mouthspills Před 9 měsíci +2

    journalists seeing babies as future workers 😂

  • @david-ex6lg
    @david-ex6lg Před rokem +20

    The key is to address the root of the problem, the underlying assumptions and behavior patterns that led to all that trauma(problem) in the first place

  • @Dominus_Potatus
    @Dominus_Potatus Před 8 měsíci +17

    unless the government can offset the downside of having a child, people won't get children.
    1. less incomes
    2. more expenses
    3. less time for yourself
    4. less space

  • @lewislinzy3437
    @lewislinzy3437 Před rokem +12

    It's better not to be even BORN into a WICKED system such as this.

  • @austen98
    @austen98 Před rokem +113

    I think what CNA was trying to point out about China and this issue is that they are making grandiose policy decisions as they did with the one-child policy. The problem is that you can't make major policy changes like that and think that the people are going to listen to you and do what you want them to do. Time has shown that this is not the case and even the one-child policy has dubious results. You can't just socially engineer people on such a large scale and this is being born by how the Chinese populous reacts to such governmental intrusion, ie 3-child policy.

    • @consp51
      @consp51 Před rokem +15

      The one-child policy was a disaster, some even rumors it was manipulated by outside interests. But that's a weakness of a centralized gov without speech freedom. They got a lot to learn from the Singapore gov.

    • @myroom4640
      @myroom4640 Před rokem

      YES AND NOW look where it has gotten them!!!! It was a ridiculous policy to begin with. It’s brought about by egotistical people, and their desire to rule the world………

    • @grape.juices
      @grape.juices Před rokem +7

      @@consp51 forget it. You guys are a city country. Our country happens to be one of the largest countries on earth by landmass and the top in terms of population. It’s not easy governing such a huge country. The country couldn’t have coped with an uncontrolled rise in population and you can attribute China’s comeback to the fact that there was good leadership and enough resources to improve the lives of the population. China is the economic engine of Asia and dare I say the world. The whole world relies on trade with China both imports and exports. The majority of the world has China as its main economic partner and most countries if not all import more than they sell to us. Your comments come from a place of arrogance and superiority that is clearly unfounded. Singapore is also a country that is 70% made up of Chinese people. Chinese people the world over have helped their economies and in Asia at least they usually are well off and have political representation. I think you have a lot to learn from the Chinese. We are the leaders in clean energy and we are able to ideate and implement policy change swiftly. No other country in the world is changing the world as much as we are. We are leading the way for a more democratic world in which all countries can govern themselves and not have to follow orders from gringos. You can’t speak of democracy when you don’t even respect the will of your own people, the sovereignty of other countries to their territory and especially when you don’t engage in bilateralism. Democracy as defined by the west is the ability to cast a vote every 4-5 years. Democracy is more than that and it’s certainly not a political tool. I don’t see Singapore being a major disruptor historically or currently on the world stage. China set the tone for the rest of east Asia and south East Asia, countries whose cultures are heavily based on ours. You need a reality check.

    • @grape.juices
      @grape.juices Před rokem +5

      @@consp51 I don’t know what kind of freedoms you think you have but we don’t. We don’t need to complain about mundane things because we have good lives, we certainly have seen our quality of life soar throughout the years and will continue to do so. If you think you have freedom of speech go ahead. Your voice is insignificant when you won’t be heard. In China things get done because if the people aren’t happy the government has no validity. The government has support and was established specifically because the ROC looked after foreign interests as opposed to ours. You’ve never been to China. Don’t claim to know anything about us. By contrast, many Chinese people know more about other countries than you do and we are certainly not going around focusing on others and criticising, our government doesn’t. We focus on ourselves as per our culture but I flip out when I see my country or my people attacked due to ignorance or the pursuit of western neocon agendas. Anti China sentiment will most certainly affect all East Asians indirectly when they travel abroad or those of us who live abroad.

    • @consp51
      @consp51 Před rokem +9

      @@grape.juices I am Chinese so I know China well. I just simply comparing China and Singapore, both share some Big Gov management types. But Singapore is a lot more transparent than the Chinese local gov.

  • @alantran1914
    @alantran1914 Před 11 měsíci +6

    This is actually a good thing, not a bad thing

  • @JeannettaJoy
    @JeannettaJoy Před rokem +14

    Why raise the retirement age when they resist hiring people over 35?

  • @LivingWithGout
    @LivingWithGout Před 8 měsíci

    I love how in depth this video is.

  • @usamahahmed
    @usamahahmed Před rokem +12

    Very informative, thanks!

  • @victortan9779
    @victortan9779 Před 9 měsíci +3

    I LAUGHED OUT LOUD when seeing protesters against retirement age postponing in France, because you would never underestimate how Chinese people can tolerate Government abusive policies especially in smaller cities and urban areas.

  • @taiong59
    @taiong59 Před 8 měsíci

    CNA is my only go to documentary now. Superb job done. Go well CNA team !!

  • @zannazhang3068
    @zannazhang3068 Před rokem +2

    Good video. Also found that the uniqlo in Sanlitun has been replaced by Gentle Monster now.

  • @yvonwheel4943
    @yvonwheel4943 Před rokem +12

    No big deal...fewer people on earth means better for all other animal species!

  • @gordonagent7037
    @gordonagent7037 Před 8 měsíci +3

    What an absolutely enthralling documentary, I found myself rewinding segments to digest the info and the broad spectrum of the topics covered I often had overlooked. Very well produced, great scope of prospective from many view points. This was a very high calibre presentation, full of facts not hype. Thank you to those concerned

  • @arbaz79
    @arbaz79 Před rokem

    Great documentary 👍.

  • @michaelhorner6121
    @michaelhorner6121 Před rokem +11

    Population is srinking due to the leadership of the country. People are leaving !

  • @twist777hz
    @twist777hz Před rokem +23

    I heard that post-covid many Chinese and foreigners are moving to (or trying to move to) Guangdong. In fact Guangdong -- specifically the GBA cities -- is one of the few provinces in China that's experiencing population growth + strong property market.

    • @angmatthew
      @angmatthew Před rokem

      Guangdong is coming out a scheme to send 300,000 youths to seek employment in rural area within the next few years. The youth unemployment rate in China is more than 20%

    • @ericphua2359
      @ericphua2359 Před rokem +7

      LOL. The property markets in Guangdong crushed and crushed again. Many property developers bankrupt and delisted from HK stock exchange.

    • @twist777hz
      @twist777hz Před rokem +2

      @@ericphua2359 Well, "crushed" largely because of the pandemic and weak economic activity. Thankfully that's over and prices are starting to pick up in Guangzhou, Dongguan, Zhuhai, etc. Also the population in GBA cities is undeniably increasing which will create further demand along the line.

    • @ericphua2359
      @ericphua2359 Před rokem +1

      @@twist777hz hopefully so

    • @ericphua2359
      @ericphua2359 Před rokem +4

      More business still closing shop, more workers loosing jobs. More outflow of people. Properties price still crushing.

  • @kokocaptainqc
    @kokocaptainqc Před 10 měsíci +6

    isnt a population decline the goal of every gov these days?

  • @paperkay
    @paperkay Před 8 měsíci +4

    Oh, no, Chinese are only 1.4 billion??! How will they ever survive??

    • @MoneyMan28
      @MoneyMan28 Před 8 měsíci

      1.5 billion is the highest in the world, USA 350 million

  • @snowwhite2146
    @snowwhite2146 Před rokem +3

    Good. Less people less wars.

  • @lepifu
    @lepifu Před rokem +5

    Postpond retirement age? What about getting the college graduate replacing the retired first?

  • @wellbeingyogi7949
    @wellbeingyogi7949 Před rokem +10

    I think this is a good news. I hope more and more countries aware of the problems of over populated people. Lesser people lesser problem 😊

  • @dm-jf5uu
    @dm-jf5uu Před 9 měsíci +2

    That's not only in China nowdays nobody wants to have kids unless you are a millionaire and can afford a nice home and nannies

  • @qimeng6731
    @qimeng6731 Před 8 měsíci +2

    The Chinese culture and society have undergone seismic shifts since the 1980s. Having children used to be something like a religious duty in the otherwise secular Chinese society. In the past, many women indeed risked and sacrificed a lot to have more than one child. But now, people born in the 90s and 00s increasingly choose not to have any children at all, and social media is flooded with posts and videos about the DINK lifestyle and how to confront bossy parents/older relatives/older coworkers who tell you that you must have children. Myself, my girlfriend, and her sister all want no children at all. For her mother, not having a child feels almost like the end of the world. For us, having a child would feel like the end of the world!

  • @kritiks-sl1vk
    @kritiks-sl1vk Před 10 měsíci +6

    I love my child too much to let him be born into this hell we call 'earth'.

  • @Whistlesonthewind
    @Whistlesonthewind Před 9 měsíci +3

    If a government wants the population to rise they need to:
    1. Provide jobs with better pay and benefits.
    2. Provide affordable housing
    3. Treat women with respect and allow them full body autonomy.
    4. Change the culture of misogyny and sexism that runs rampant in that country.

  • @meglukes
    @meglukes Před 9 měsíci +2

    “Encouraged” people to have less children is a bit of an understatement.

  • @___beyondhorizon4664
    @___beyondhorizon4664 Před 8 měsíci +2

    There are few points missing on this report
    Foreigners are limited to wire money out of China to $500/day. They expect foreigners to spend most of their income domestically. Foreigners with special skills are granted special permit, such as fashion design and marketing, graphic design, interior design etc. I was recruited to teach in Guangzhou for design and marketing subjects between 2009-2013.
    My school was near the little Africa in this report, many African there speak Mandarin😅. The business activity were going on until midnight due to the time zone in Africa. That area was also little xingzgian, manu Chinese Muslim selling BBQ till pass midnight on the streets. The left trash all over the streets, locals complaining, they also didn't pay taxes.
    Its not likely China will embrace immigrants workers, trading or businessmen or business women are welcome. It's plain racism, they called all foreigners" guao-low" means ghost. Unlike Canada or US, China has existed for millions of years with its own people, they don't need immigrants to build the country. China official name is translate as CENTRAL COUNTRY. Maybe racism doesn't apply there, they had this country since the beginning of time, they can decide who are their people.

  • @chriswatson1698
    @chriswatson1698 Před rokem +23

    Xenophobia is the IRRATIONAL fear of the foreign.
    If foreigners DO compete with locals for opportunities, then it is IRRATIONAL to be unafraid of them

  • @karthur3421
    @karthur3421 Před rokem +14

    So it's their first drop in population, they got plenty of room to maneuver then, most countries have already experienced drop in population, their immediate neighbours South Korea and Japan, especially, then across the ocean there's the US and EU too that are always desperate for immigrants.
    China still has many options, lifting one child policy is just the most obvious one and honestly, it's time, they can farm enough food to feed their own population now.
    They have many other moves which many developed countries already exhausted, from increasing the retirement age (surprisingly low), implementing/encouraging less hectic work lifestyle, sponsoring parents for each babies, tax reliefs, marriage counselling before divorce, immigrant/foreign workers etc.

    • @jjsamuelgunn1136
      @jjsamuelgunn1136 Před rokem +5

      China's population is shrinking. It's a biggest nation in the world. So it will shrink to the population size of USA, Japan, Europe etc. Are these places unable to cope with such a 'small population' that they currently have. At the rate that technology is advancing, workers on this planet will be replaced by robots pretty soon. In fact, with an overly large population, the bigger problem for China is how to find employment for its people if automation reduces the need for human labor.

    • @ericphua2359
      @ericphua2359 Před rokem

      All Province Government enmass to much debt, that some even has problems managing interest of these debt. No money for any incentive. They even have to reduce civil servant work forces and pensions.

    • @gillianmay5817
      @gillianmay5817 Před 10 měsíci +2

      You have a point with everything else, but the one child policy was lifted in 2015.

  • @charleslewis375
    @charleslewis375 Před rokem +2

    The viewpoints of Dan Wang from Hang Seng China are convincing and profound.

  • @cherrychen6152
    @cherrychen6152 Před rokem

    this one is good

  • @kedeglow2743
    @kedeglow2743 Před rokem +14

    Even in a country where people have been conditioned for so many years to blind obedience, eventually the human spirit and longing for freedom will say, "NO". As in "No,...you cannot force us to have more children when You (the government) have made it so extremely difficult for us just to get by, much less better ourselves".

  • @karenagen6757
    @karenagen6757 Před 10 měsíci +7

    The population density in China is so overwhelming around their cities that this phenomenon is easily seen although it is happening all around the world. Because China is the world's industry, it is expected that they maintain a high work ratio. But they are human, and will feel the effects of disease, mental health, and economic challenges. I imagine their younger populace would have been privy to the excessive workload of Generation X and would not want to go through that.

  • @bereal6590
    @bereal6590 Před 9 měsíci +2

    No wonder the Chinese live longer, retirement between 50-60, is amazing. It also allows those who are worn out with physical labour or who are sick to rest. It allows all those who wish to continue to work because they're fit well and happy to work can do so. China is better than my cou try! ! Retirement is now 68!!! This is unfair and ridiculous.

  • @nickiseb8910
    @nickiseb8910 Před 9 měsíci +3

    Simple. Like all developed countries do or will do. Less money to armies more to social care.

  • @987654321wormy
    @987654321wormy Před rokem +2

    "Among young Chinese there's a growing disdain for blue color work." That sounds much like the US, Canada and Western Europe as well.

  • @allythearts5439
    @allythearts5439 Před 7 měsíci

    I ❤ cna insider
    I learn so much here watching yalls videos 😊

  • @OhiChicken
    @OhiChicken Před 7 měsíci +1

    My company is sending like 70% of our production jobs to China and theyre working on their own suppliers for raw materials. I personally think its a bad idea since we were doing just fine here...moving our production to China just stimulates the American economy less.

  • @tom_123
    @tom_123 Před rokem +7

    This could have been half the length. People want INFORMATION and analysis. Not long lingering shots of stock photos of skylines and crowds. I’m sure it’s really interesting but the editorial and production style is just too slow for me. I don’t want to wait 5 seconds between sentences, just to hear the same sentence paraphrased in a more dramatic fashion. Couldn’t finish it.

  • @gijose83
    @gijose83 Před 8 měsíci +3

    can't even think about raising a family if you don't have a job

    • @MoneyMan28
      @MoneyMan28 Před 8 měsíci

      400 million don't have jobs

    • @evilds3261
      @evilds3261 Před 7 měsíci

      @@MoneyMan28400 million will likely not have kids.

    • @MoneyMan28
      @MoneyMan28 Před 7 měsíci

      @@evilds3261 but the poor people breeding the most

    • @evilds3261
      @evilds3261 Před 7 měsíci

      @@MoneyMan28Yes, but the poor people dying the most too.

  • @jacquelynrobinson6534
    @jacquelynrobinson6534 Před 10 měsíci

    A great report! I learned many things about China.

  • @lowwastehighmelanin
    @lowwastehighmelanin Před rokem +19

    Would be cool if in these profiles, Africa would stop being treated like one blob when it's the largest, most diverse continent on the planet.
    Anyway it's very sad to see what's happening to China but this is their government's fault directly. Even the internal migrants are leaving.
    Friend of mine has family there, came back to California anyway.
    38:23 She's very spoiled. That's the norm in the United States and many people work until 70. I feel like maybe China has made too many mistakes at the same time.
    I'm also curious why the mass migration into Vietnam isn't being addressed? Will we just ignore the 1.3 million workers who gave up and left China and won't return even though they are from there? That should REALLY worry the government a lot but they seem indifferent.

    • @kria9119
      @kria9119 Před rokem +2

      Africa is not the largest continent, what?? And diversity is subjective

    • @taitotv
      @taitotv Před rokem +5

      50+ countries with their own cultures and subcultures sound pretty diverse

    • @koiue.g8709
      @koiue.g8709 Před rokem

      Diverse? They all black

    • @koiue.g8709
      @koiue.g8709 Před rokem

      @@kagnetix6674 Europe has many black people and arabs too, Iranians are not the same to Japanese, and Indians are very different from people in Vladivostok for example so Europe and Asia are more diverse skin color wise

    • @MotozVietnam
      @MotozVietnam Před 11 měsíci

      @@kria9119yes it is. It is purposely made small on the map. Do your research

  • @stephanbateman5410
    @stephanbateman5410 Před rokem +32

    a very informative video. I personally think that China’s primary problem is the closing of markets to it or the altering of developing nation status.

    • @user-rj5kx8wr6y
      @user-rj5kx8wr6y Před rokem +2

      I think you do not have a clue.
      China's problem is, as it has always been, its population!

    • @stephanbateman5410
      @stephanbateman5410 Před rokem +1

      @@user-rj5kx8wr6y i have lived in China for 6 years. you live where???

    • @ceciliawong5118
      @ceciliawong5118 Před rokem

      China prepare to close the door and want to change the system of the world

    • @1943stone
      @1943stone Před rokem

      ​@@stephanbateman5410 and I have lived in China for my whole life. I don't agree with you, you live where ? seriously, what I see from this video is merely a "hope" for China to do badly in the future. economical and political difficulties have been experienced in modern China, but these media keep talking about them like each one of them means the end of China.

    • @stephanbateman5410
      @stephanbateman5410 Před rokem +1

      @@1943stone Wenzhou

  • @amritabhatt4086
    @amritabhatt4086 Před 9 měsíci +3

    What's wrong in it? Is in't this good for the environment ?

  • @alu780
    @alu780 Před 9 měsíci +2

    Finally. This can only be a good thing all around.

  • @luongo7886
    @luongo7886 Před rokem +6

    Chinese people are very smart. Why should you bring someone into this miserable world of hardship if you yourself are barely making it? Chinese should continue to stop having children.

  • @ismaelgaxiola6425
    @ismaelgaxiola6425 Před rokem +2

    Young person: Why will I try to produce more than I need if any surplus I may gain wont be enough to really advance myself but It will be spent on my elders (old family members and old goverment)?
    Now if there were improvement for the common/standar/average individual in been able to achieve affordable housing/health/education for ALL of us ; then It will be inspiring to work/labor towards something realistic and inclusive 😊
    To much DEBT Is destructive 😢
    Like that Sonora Cactus 🌵, lives in the desert but if it drinks to much water;the weight of that too much water itself will make it fall😓
    Homo Sapiens sometimes make mistakes but from the mistakes we learn just need to pay the price of said mistake 😁
    Blessings🙏

  • @Danderman888
    @Danderman888 Před rokem +48

    Trying to solve a systemic problem with linear thinking is as futile as bailing a leaking boat with a teaspoon.
    Even for a small country like Singapore, where systemic thinking and planning has been a way of life since independence, tackling this problem has been rather challenging and slow going.
    Given how much massive China is, despite their obvious learning from Singapore's experience, the challenge would definitely be amplified. But considering how quickly they have achieved their current success so far, we can be confident they will also solve this problem eventually.

    • @JakeLOL1111
      @JakeLOL1111 Před rokem +12

      don't think so. they're current success is massively overrated in my opinion. pretty easy to achieve massive growth rates when you have about 5 major powers before then as case studies on how to do it and the best demographic dividend in history (very few older people because of the famine, very few younger because of the one child policy). it is still absolutely mind boggling how quickly they managed to do it, but when you realise that it was really a matter of just copy and pasting with brilliant conditions, the correct conclusion to draw is that there success in that regard with have basically no bearing on the future.
      china is in a VERY unique situation and basically can't look to anyone for guidance now. it'll require ingenuity. not saying they can't do it, but the past can't be used as evidence in support of notion that they can

    • @JakeLOL1111
      @JakeLOL1111 Před rokem

      *their

    • @ericphua2359
      @ericphua2359 Před rokem +8

      Nah, it next to impossible to convince young chinese to have children.
      >Property price too high.
      >No job security
      >No social security.
      >cost to having children too high and competitive.
      They don't see a future for themselves, and you expect them to get married and have children? LOL.

    • @mysterioanonymous3206
      @mysterioanonymous3206 Před rokem

      @@JakeLOL1111 they also used stolen IP and market protections to achieve that. Now that they're more advanced they're starting to stall, just like everyone else. It happens to everyone. And mind you, what they want you to see are the urban centres, their most developed areas. It's like looking at San Francisco or NYC and thinking that's the standard. People in the countryside often still cook on fire in China....

    • @charleschoy2327
      @charleschoy2327 Před rokem +5

      @@ericphua2359 You think the rest of the world is any different. A modern worker is expected to change career three times in their life span. Technology is changing all the time. Except government jobs, all companies hire and lay off.

  • @dova-oj1kt
    @dova-oj1kt Před rokem +3

    Uncomfortable truth is, African population boom is no answer to massive population decline elsewhere. It will be great for humanity if they prove me otherwise.

  • @metalhamster14
    @metalhamster14 Před rokem +1

    CNA is my go to news source in South East / East Asia.

  • @jjsamuelgunn1136
    @jjsamuelgunn1136 Před rokem +3

    we need more agricultural products to feed people.

  • @truthismycause2800
    @truthismycause2800 Před 9 měsíci +18

    China and the West are going in the right direction population wise. As resources become more scarse, a smaller population garantees there's enough for all and the regeneration of ecology.
    It's Africa, parts of Asia and South America going the wrong way.
    Our home planet is on the brink of collapse. If we keep growing in number like locusts, the ecological degradation will be irreversable and earth will become sterile.
    Fresh water is scarse, agricultural soils are rapidly getting depleted of nutrients, the oceans are nearly depleted of fishing species and turning into a noxious miasma, the planet is getting covered with concrete, non-biodegradable garbage is piling up and humans are accumulating dangerours chemicals like heavy metals in their bodies turning them into walking cancers.
    If the fake capitalism system of delusional eternal growth is abandoned, humanity and societies will be fine, finer than with unsustainable population growth.

    • @kathywamukoya4882
      @kathywamukoya4882 Před 3 měsíci

      Tell that to the aging population that contributed to a pension fund when they were working and will have no money to support them since there will be no workers in future to feed into the pension fund. That’s one of the main issue with a slowing population. It’s a complex issue.

    • @truthismycause2800
      @truthismycause2800 Před 3 měsíci

      @@kathywamukoya4882 We don't need as much manual labour as we used to, nor intellectual either. We're in the age of robotics and AI.
      All it's needed is for business to be taxed properly replacing the social security funds that previously came from workers' contributions. Anyway, people without money doesn't consume, without consumerism there's no growth, not even capitalism. The system needs an update and adjustments.

  • @ginadelsasso288
    @ginadelsasso288 Před 9 měsíci +4

    We all need to start limiting how many children we have. My grandma had 9, my mom had 3 and i only had 1. Our earth can not support more than 11 billion people and we should keep at at half of that in order to keep wildlife populations protected.

  • @museemtarot4121
    @museemtarot4121 Před 8 měsíci +2

    They were just complaining that they are over populated so…

  • @bascoaful
    @bascoaful Před 9 měsíci +2

    lol work until 55 what a joke, ill have to work til 70 probably

  • @beccalove8791
    @beccalove8791 Před 10 měsíci +11

    When you grow up as an only child it can be a very lonely existence. As an adult you may not want to have children because childhood is remembered as an unhappy experience

    • @zoesolanki961
      @zoesolanki961 Před 9 měsíci +3

      As an only child, I agree with you

    • @nofilter.906
      @nofilter.906 Před 8 měsíci

      ​@@zoesolanki961really?..

    • @zoesolanki961
      @zoesolanki961 Před 8 měsíci

      @@nofilter.906 Yes, but I went against it and decided to definitely have more than 1 child, because my childhood was lonely. It didn't help that both my parents were only children, so our family was very small.

    • @nofilter.906
      @nofilter.906 Před 8 měsíci

      @@zoesolanki961 this is going to sound crazy.....but your words made me say yes to having another child,.....my wife and i have been on the fence about having a second child,but we were leaning more to NOT having more....and in the back of my head i always thought that my boy will be without a brother or sister in his life,is it wrong to deny him this goodness of having a sibling....
      I had a brother and sisters,so does my wife.....but we still focused on if were both working,WHO IS GOING TO TAKE CARE OF THEM TILL THERE SCHOOL AGE,,,I believe my thoughts were selfish......I think I'll ask my wife if she wants another baby...
      .........thank you.

    • @zoesolanki961
      @zoesolanki961 Před 8 měsíci

      @@nofilter.906 wow, that's amazing. I would have loved a sibling, I found being an only child emotionally very hard to be honest with you. Wishing you both all the best 💫

  • @Redfizh
    @Redfizh Před rokem +26

    When ever population shrinks by one, a tree grows somewhere.

  • @waitawhileexplorer3904
    @waitawhileexplorer3904 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Now if only India's population would shrink also we may all benefit.

  • @GungaLaGunga
    @GungaLaGunga Před rokem +1

    36:08 that isn't going so well in France right now.

  • @porkyrabbit
    @porkyrabbit Před 8 měsíci +5

    Wolves are upset the sheep won’t reproduce

  • @gamearena9519
    @gamearena9519 Před rokem +8

    This is litteraly a big lie. There are hundreds of milions chinese in the villages loving to find jobs in the cities to move to cities.

    • @Ryan_Christopher
      @Ryan_Christopher Před rokem +1

      Village people not skilled. That is why they are still in the villages.

  • @leponpon6935
    @leponpon6935 Před rokem +1

    Wages that rise with inflation alone is no good metric of measuring cost.

  • @gregoryglen808
    @gregoryglen808 Před 7 měsíci +1

    China needs to create/re-design industries where highly skilled workers can earn good wages. Simultaneously it needs to retrain a lot of these unemployed graduates to become skilled manufacturing workers.

  • @lily_m3538
    @lily_m3538 Před rokem +4

    Not to worry as there are plenty of African and Filipinos wanting to come to China.And of course, there are millions of Chinese living in Africa.

    • @hkfoo3333
      @hkfoo3333 Před rokem

      not really. It will be a blessing for China to have less population as there will be less jobs in the age of AI and robots.
      The one I can see a disaster is India. Poor and big number of people to feed

    • @mathieug6136
      @mathieug6136 Před rokem

      You think China would make citizens out of 150M young Africans?

    • @marygekonge5983
      @marygekonge5983 Před rokem

      No African want to go to china

  • @MrOverfloater
    @MrOverfloater Před 8 měsíci +1

    A shortage of overworked, underpaid workers. How awful!

    • @MoneyMan28
      @MoneyMan28 Před 8 měsíci

      400 million don't have jobs

  • @cinpeace353
    @cinpeace353 Před rokem +1

    Raising retirement age should only be done in phases. Not when u are 59, suddenly policy changed to 62 and immediately affect you. It should at least give people 5 years ahead of the change. Like announcing now the new retirement age while anyone with less than 5 years within the old policy will not be affected.

    • @KoeSeer
      @KoeSeer Před rokem

      desperate situation needs desperate measure. china is in huge jeopardy if it was done in "normal speed", they gonna done in 5 years.

  • @J.Denny-W.-hf8bm
    @J.Denny-W.-hf8bm Před rokem +4

    Good..i hope they shrink FURTHER...GREAT FOR THE PLANET

  • @nneichan9353
    @nneichan9353 Před 10 měsíci +4

    I worry about China's food independence. The bizarre news stories about rural enforcement troops destroying crops and home gardens, as well as inhibiting farm equipment traveling and harvesting crops like wheat, forcing farmers to face rotting or mouldering crops that can't be used.