Thursday, April 28, 2011

China Rapidly Becomes Another Japan

The first census in a decade shows that Chinese population is rapidly aging, people over the age of 60 now account for 13.3% of the population, up nearly 3% since 2000. Nearly one in six people in China is over 60 years old.

Although in terms of percentage of aging population, China is still far behind Japan, the pace of aging in China has been alarmingly similar to that of Japan.

Merely twenty years ago, only 11.6% of the population in Japan was 65 years or older. Now, the ratio stand at 21%, the highest proportion of elderly citizens in the world.

In China, the aging trend is accelerating, according to Ma Jiantang, head of the National Bureau of Statistics. The 3% increase in a decade could seen a significance booster from now on.

One the other hand, the proportion of mainland Chinese people aged 14 or younger was 16.6%, down by 6.29 percentage points from 2000.

The quickly aging trend could bring many issues, such as an increased demand for care facilities, care services and personnel, heavy burden on young workers, and anxiety over post-retirement care.

Thursday, April 07, 2011

Another quake hits Japan, how about some Haiku?

Among many aftershocks after the March 11 earthquake that left over 10,000 deaths, another powerful earthquake, measured at M7.8 hit Japan early this morning.The earthquake has prompted tsunami warnings in the northern part of the island nation. One meter wave is expected.

The slightly positive sign is the ongoing nuclear crisis, which has been brought under control, Daijobu, described by a friend living in Japan. However, after this new quake, Fukushima has been evacuated.

How ordinary Japanese people view the series of disasters? One shared his view on the Twitter in a Haiku style:

Sleepless night
News keep streaming in

Where is my good night?
 
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