Document sans titre
China’s Long
March to Retirement Reform: The Graying of the Middle Kingdom Revisited warns
that the aging of China’s population could usher in a new era of slower
economic growth and mounting social stress as tens of millions of Chinese arrive
at old age over the next few decades without pensions and with inadequate family
support.
The report evaluates recent
government efforts to prepare for the challenge and outlines an ambitious new
reform plan. The plan provides for a universal poverty backstop that would protect
all Chinese against an uncertain old age. It would also create a national and
fully portable system of funded retirement accounts that would allow a growing
share of China’s elderly to enjoy a comfortable retirement without overburdening
China’s smaller working generation.
With China confronting a
serious near-term economic slowdown, some may conclude that now is not the right
time to address the long-term aging challenge. The CSIS report argues that China’s
age wave is approaching so fast—and its potential economic and social
costs are so large—that delay is not an option. Concerted action on the
long-term challenge is needed now to ensure that China’s economic fundamentals
remain strong as recovery begins. Indeed, it may even hasten recovery by bolstering
confidence in the government’s economic and social stewardship.
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Read the report