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金融时报:中国下个十年的幽灵

所属教程:金融时报原文阅读

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2022年01月30日

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中国下个十年的幽灵

FT亚洲版主编皮林(David Pilling)指出,有个并未引起足够重视的幽灵在中国飘荡:人口问题。要知道中国劳动力人口减少时,国民生活水平只有美国的20%。这个问题将深刻影响中国的增长潜力和社会和谐,而解决起来则牵一发而动全身。在三中全会,中国领导人要为今后10年的发展制定规划,他们会怎么看待这个问题?

测试中可能遇到的词汇和知识:

Shakespeare's seven stages of human life 莎士比亚在《皆大欢喜》(As You Like It)里总结了人一生的七个阶段:infant, schoolboy, lover, soldier, justice, advanced age, dementia(痴呆) and approaching death. “lean and slipper'd pantaloon”莎士比亚的“人生第六个阶段”的形象:“精瘦的趿着拖鞋的龙钟老叟”

ominously ['ɔminəsli] 有凶兆的

conjure ['kʌndʒə] 用魔法和咒语召唤

threadbare ['θredbeə] 衣衫褴褛的

gargantuan [gɑː'gæntjʊən] 巨大的,庞大的

bedfellow ['bedfeləʊ] 枕边人,同床共枕的人

predisposed [,pri:di'spəuzd] 预先有倾向的

The ghost at China's third plenum: demographics (962 words)

By David Pilling

As the leaders of China's standing committee (average age 65) prepare for one of the Chinese Communist party's most important occasions, one issue will be hidden in plain view: the country is rapidly growing old.

President Xi Jinping, a sprightly 60, is only up to the third plenum of his leadership, an event at which he is expected to set out long-term plans for the country. But the nation as a whole is fast approaching the sixth age of man. In Shakespeare's version, the fifth stage of human life is a well-fed individual with “a round belly” full of chicken. Unfortunately, China is moving “into the lean and slipper'd pantaloon” of old age before most of its people have grown wealthy. Its average standard of living is somewhere between those of Ecuador and Jamaica.

It is hard to overstate how fast China is ageing. Life expectancy has more than doubled from 35 in 1949 to 75 today, a miraculous achievement. Meanwhile, the fertility rate has plummeted to 1.5 or lower, far below the 2.1 needed to keep a population stable. Cai Fang, a demographer at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, says the country will have moved from labour surplus to labour shortage at the fastest pace in history. In 2011, its workforce shrank for the first time, years before anyone had predicted. Japan reached a similar turning point in about 1990. Ominously for China, that was just before its economy sank into two stagnant decades. By then, its living standards were already at nearly 90 per cent of US levels. In purchasing power parity terms, China's per capita income is still below 20 per cent. “There's now no doubt,” says Professor Cai. “China will be old before it is rich.”

In his book, Stumbling Giant: The Threats to China's Future, Timothy Beardson identifies demographics as the single-biggest obstacle to China's dream of becoming rich and powerful. He pinpoints four areas where the population time bomb ticks the loudest.

The first is growth. China is reaching the end of a 35-year period when it was able to conjure gross domestic product simply by shifting workers from low-productivity farm jobs to higher-productivity factory ones. The song of China's miracle has a three-word refrain: “Just add people.” Now, the country will have to shift to a model where growth is derived from innovation.

Second is ageing. The number of Chinese over 65 will triple to 300m by 2030. Today, only 1.5 per cent of the elderly are in institutional care. But the low birth rate will make it harder for single offspring to look after parents and grandparents. China may soon need institutional care for tens of millions of people, no easy task for a country with threadbare social services.

Third is the gender imbalance. Because of the preference for male children, there are now roughly six boys born for every five girls. In the next two decades that will mean tens of millions of men will have no chance of finding a wife. Mostly poorer and with fewer prospects, they could well become a source of social discontent and crime.

Fourth is absolute population. The number of Chinese is likely to peak at below 1.4bn some time after 2020. Today, there are four Chinese for every American. By the end of the century, that ratio could fall to between 1.9 and 1.25, according to Mr Beardson. If he is anything like right, that would have huge implications for the relative weight of the Chinese economy and thus its ability to project military power.

Demographics, then, hangs heavy over a third plenum, whose remit is to set policy for the next decade. If there is an overriding theme it is that, for the necessary shift in economic model to be achieved, the state will need to shrink its role in the economy. Few of the gargantuan state-owned enterprises are likely to provide the innovation that China needs if it is to raise productivity. Yet far from shrinking, the SOEs have grown, recipients of massive injections of state funds designed to keep economic growth going.

“Just add people” has given way to “just add capital”. But capital is going to the wrong places. SOEs account for a third of GDP yet suck in perhaps 90 per cent of credit. State-owned banks rarely lend to the small enterprises that are likely to be the motor of future innovation. To change banks' habits, the state will need to relinquish control over interest rates and lending – no easy thing for an authoritarian system to do. The state must also shrink in the social arena. A creative society and strict censorship are odd bedfellows. The hukou registration system, which restricts migration from the countryside to the cities, also exacerbates labour shortages. Scrapping it, though, would mean losing a lever of social control and would risk alienating an urban middle class not obviously predisposed to share its gleaming new cities with country cousins.

The influence of ageing can be exaggerated. India's supposedly superior demographics creates enormous problems of its own. New Delhi may soon confront a massive population of ill-educated and angry youth without gainful employment. Equally, headline GDP rates do not matter all that much, except when it comes to national power. Day to day, what counts is living standards, or GDP per capita.

Yet to keep individual incomes rising will mean profound changes to China's industrial, financial and social structure. Innovation is not available by decree. Whether such a transformation can be engineered by a one-party state – or whether it is even compatible with a one-party state – is the overarching question of the next few decades.

请根据你所读到的文章内容,完成以下自测题目:

1.What is the meaning of Shakespeare's “stages of human life” in this article?

A.That the Chinese are getting rich.

B.That the Chinese are gaining the problem of obesity.

C.That the Chinese are growing old before getting rich.

D.That the Chinese are becoming more interested in good clothing.

答案(1)

2.What is the best summary of this article?

A.“China may soon need institutional care for tens of millions of people.”

B.“The state must also shrink in the social arena.”

C.“The influence of ageing can be exaggerated.”

D.“China will be old before it is rich.”

答案(2)

3.What is not among the “four areas where the population time bomb ticks the loudest”?

A.Economic growth.

B.Relationship with US.

C.Caring for the elderly.

D.Gender imbalance.

答案(3)

4.What should Chinese leaders do in the third plenum, accoeding to the writer?

A.Invest more in physical capital.

B.Expand SOEs to create jobs.

C.Reform the hukou system.

D.Pray.

答案(4)

* * *

(1)答案:C.That the Chinese are growing old before getting rich.

解释:在莎士比亚的版本中,人在第五个阶段开始发福,有足够的肉吃,在第六个阶段成为“精瘦的趿着拖鞋的龙钟老叟”。而中国似乎还未经历第五个阶段就直接迈向第六阶段。

(2)答案:D.“China will be old before it is rich.”

解释:A方向正确但只是一个方面,B并非是文章主旨,C显然错误。

(3)答案:B.Relationship with US.

解释:ACD都是正确的,B本该是中国人口的绝对数量,因为中国人口总量可能很快就下降,而美国一直在增长,两国实力对比受此影响巨大。

(4)答案:C.Reform the hukou system.

解释:对于AB,作者说,中国的capital is going to the wrong places,创造就业并不多的国企拿走了90%的贷款,政府主导的经济模式并不能扭转结构问题。C是正确的,解决户口问题可以让人力资源更合理地流动。至于D,作者还不至于这么悲观。


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