Debate: Aging population

李珅 China Daily, January 10, 2011


Mu Guangzong: Senior citizens need better treatment

The draft law on senior citizens, which requires people to visit their aged parents regularly to help fulfill their emotional and spiritual needs, indicates that taking care of senior citizens has become a serious problem in China.

An aging population reflects a country’s advancement in science and technology, and higher standards of living. But it poses a challenge, too, for it creates new problems for the country.

The number of people aged 60 years and above in China has risen to 160 million, or more than 12 percent of the total population. An aging society, according to international standards, is one that has more than 10 percent of its population above the age of 60.

The number of aging people in China is likely to increase until it reaches to about 240 million, 17 percent of the population in 2020, when the country will have about 30 million people over the age of 80. China’s economic and social structure and function are still in the reformatory stage and, hence, cannot keep pace with the rising number of elderly people. Continue

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新老年法载不动“空巢”许多愁

(北京周报)我国一些家庭子女由于工作、学习、结婚等原因离家后,独守“空巢”的中老年夫妇无人照料,权益得不到应有的保障。最近,新修订的老年法在“精神慰藉”一章中规定,“家庭成员不得在精神上忽视、孤立老年人”,特别强调“与老年人分开居住的赡养人,要经常看望或者问候老人”。 Continue reading

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Next stop grandma’s house — it’s the law

By Jessica Beaton 7 January, 2011

Guilt trips for not visiting the folks may soon be replaced by police visits.

If you thought the annual visit to the parents during Spring Festival (Chinese New Year) was just about bearable, take a deep breath: mom and pop may soon be able to demand you visit them more often, through the courts.

A draft amendment to China’s ‘Elderly Law’ requiring the children of elderly Chinese to visit home more often is being considered by the government. If passed, it would require children to care for their parents’ “spiritual needs and cannot neglect or isolate them,” according to Legal Daily. Continue reading

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