Total fertility rate from 1930 to 1949 These are estimates as there are no registry data for that period. Sources:
Our World In Data and
Gapminder Foundation.
Births and deaths since 1949 Notable events in demography of China: • 1958–1962 –
Great Leap Forward • 1976 – End of the
Cultural Revolution • 1979–2015 –
One-child policy Total fertility rate by region According to the 2000 census, the
TFR was 1.22 (0.86 for cities, 1.08 for towns and 1.43 for villages/outposts). Beijing had the lowest
TFR at 0.67, while
Guizhou had the highest at 2.19. The
Xiangyang district of
Jiamusi city (
Heilongjiang) has a TFR of 0.41, which is the lowest TFR recorded anywhere in the world in recorded history. Other extremely low TFR counties are: 0.43 in the
Heping district of
Tianjin city (
Tianjin), and 0.46 in the
Mawei district of
Fuzhou city (
Fujian). At the other end TFR was 3.96 in
Geji County (
Tibet), 4.07 in
Jiali County (Tibet), and 5.47 in
Baqing County (Tibet). The 2010 census reported a TFR of 1.18 (0.88 in cities, 1.15 in townships, and 1.44 in rural areas). The five regions with the lowest fertility rates were Beijing (0.71), Shanghai (0.74),
Liaoning (0.74),
Heilongjiang (0.75), and
Jilin (0.76). The five regions with the highest fertility rates were
Guangxi (1.79),
Guizhou (1.75),
Xinjiang (1.53),
Hainan (1.51), and
Anhui (1.48). The shift of fertility rate recorded in 2020 census compared to that in the previous 2 censuses may not be an actual recovery, but rather due to the low quality and massive underreporting of lower-age groups in the 2000 and 2010 censuses, while the
population control policy in China back then may also give families an incentive to hide their children, which is largely relieved as the policy changed in 2010s. This can be demonstrated by the much lower number of population aged 0~4 and 5~9 in the 2000 and 2010 censuses when compared to the corresponding age groups in 2020. Total fertility rate by ethnic group (2010 census):
Han (1.14),
Zhuang (1.59),
Hui (1.48),
Manchu (1.18),
Uyghur (2.04),
Miao (1.82),
Yi (1.82),
Tujia (1.74),
Tibetan (1.60),
Mongols (1.26). In 2025, China's population decreased by 3.39 million, with 7.92 million births outpaced by 11.31 million deaths. The country's population stands at 1.4 billion, still the world's second-largest after India. The birth rate fell to 5.63 births per 1,000 people, down from 6.39 in 2023, continuing a steady decline since 2016. Despite a slight uptick in 2024, the trend suggests no reversal. The decline follows years of strict "one-child" policy until its end in 2016 and mirrors patterns seen in other countries like Japan and South Korea, where rising education levels, changing attitudes toward marriage, urbanization, and high child-rearing costs contribute to falling birth rates.
Life expectancy Source:
UN World Population Prospects Fertility and mortality Beginning in the early 1950s,
mortality steadily declined; it continued to decline through 1978 and remained relatively constant through 1987. One major fluctuation was reported in a computer reconstruction of China's population trends from 1953 to 1987 produced by the
United States Bureau of the Census. The computer model showed that the crude death rate increased dramatically during the famine years associated with the
Great Leap Forward (1958–60). China exhibits a serious
gender imbalance. Census data obtained in 2000 revealed that 119 boys were born for every 100 girls, and among China's "floating population" the ratio was as high as 128:100. These situations led the government in July 2004 to ban selective abortions of female fetuses. It is estimated that this imbalance will rise until 2025–2030 to reach 20% then slowly decrease. In the 2020s, cash incentives have been offered to increase birth rates. Local government family-planning committees, previously used to enforce the one-child policy, are deployed for pro-natalist policies such as calling women to check on their
menstrual cycle.
Censorship of data Although the
National Bureau of Statistics of China reported 9.02 million births in 2023, the state-owned
Mother and Infant Daily newspaper reported there were 7.88 million births for the same year. The report was promptly
censored following publication. The
World Factbook estimated the 2019 active labor force was 774.71 million.
Height and weight As of 2020, the average Chinese man was tall in 2019, the figures showed, and women's average height was . The same study showed an average Chinese man weighed , up over 10 years, while women were heavier on average at . They were up respectively from 5 years earlier.
Gender balance Future challenges for China will be the gender disparity. According to the
2020 census, males account for 51.24% of China's 1.41 billion people, while females made up 48.76% of the total. The sex ratio (the number of males for each female in a population) at birth was 118.06 boys to every 100 girls (54.14%) in
2010, higher than the 116.86 (53.89%) of 2000, but 0.53 points lower than the ratio of 118.59 (54.25%) in 2005. == Ethnic groups ==