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China
is the most populous country in the world, with 1.25909
billion people at the end of 1999, about 22 percent
of the world's total. This figure does not include many
Chinese in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region,Taiwan
Province and Macao Special Administrative Region. The
population density in China is 130 people per sq km.
This population, however, is unevenly distributed. Along
the densely populated east coast there are more than
400 people per sq km; in the central areas, over 200;
and in the sparsely populated plateaus in the west there
are less than 10 people per sq km.
Urban/rural: The population in cities and towns
makes up 30.4 percent; and that in rural areas, 69.6
percent.
Sex: The male population is 50.8 percent; and
the female population, 49.2 percent.
Age: People 14 years or younger make up 25.7
percent; those from 15 to 64, 67.6 percent; and those
65 or older, 6.7 percent.
When New China was founded in 1949, China had a population
of 541.67 million. Owing to China's stable society,
rapid production development, improvement of medical
and health conditions, insufficient awareness of the
importance of population growth control and shortage
of experience, the population grew rapidly, reaching
806.71 million in 1969. In the early 1970s, the Chinese
government realized that the over-rapid population growth
was harmful to economic and social development, and
would cause great difficulties in the fields of employment,
housing, communications and medical care; and that if
China could not effectively check the over-rapid population
growth, and alleviate the tremendous pressure that the
population growth was exerting on land, forests and
water resources, the worsening of the ecology and the
environment in the coming decades would be disastrous,
thus endangering the necessary conditions for the survival
of humanity, and sustainable social and economic development.
Then the Chinese government began implementing a family
planning, population control and population quality
improvement policy in accordance with China's basic
conditions of being a large country with a poor economic
foundation, a large population and little cultivated
land, so as to promote the coordinated development of
the economy, society, resources and environment. Since
then birth rates have steadily declined year by year.
China's birth rate dropped from 34.11 per thousand in
1969 to 15.23 per thousand at the end of 1999; and the
natural growth rate decreased from 26.08 per thousand
to 8.77 per thousand, thus basically realizing a change
in the population reproduction type to one characterized
by low-birth, low-death and low-increase rates.
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