Birth rate woes hit China where schools are closing for lack of children

In neighbouring Hubei province, recruitment of schoolteachers has dropped one-fifth over the same period.

The main reason for the fall appears to be the declining numbers of schoolchildren, as China experiences a period of “ultra-low” fertility, with fewer than 1.4 live births per woman over a lifetime.

The China Population and Development Research Centre estimates that the total fertility rate dropped to 1.09 in 2022, while the number of births halved between 2016 and 2023, to 9.02 million.

Jiangxi’s education department acknowledged the challenge in an official reply to suggestions on system reform at the end of June. “[The] low fertility rate will become one of the main risks for the country’s population development,” it said.

According to the Jiangxi authorities, the province’s population share of children aged 0-15 has fallen in each of the past four years, with a drop of 480,900 last year – the biggest decline since 2020.

Education resources must be restructured in response to the decreasing fertility rate, the department said, noting the closure of one-fifth of schools in the province’s rural areas with fewer than 100 students.

A similar situation in Hunan province, in central China, last year prompted education authorities to announce there would be no new kindergartens built in rural areas.

The number of children in Hunan’s kindergartens decreased by 14.79 per cent to 319,400 in 2023, compared to the previous year.

The same pattern occurred across the country, with national data showing a decrease in the number of preschool children for the third consecutive year.

According to the Ministry of Education, there were fewer than 275,000 kindergartens last year – a drop of 14,800 from 2022. Enrolments declined in the same period by 5.35 million to 40.9 million.

Rural areas are under greater pressure from the demographic changes, according to Dong Yuzheng, president of the Guangdong Social Sciences Association in southern China.

As the population urbanises and concentrates in large and medium-sized cities, rural areas experience a decrease in population, which also leads to a reduction of preschool students, Dong told business media outlet Yicai.com.

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