China will “gradually raise” its retirement age for the first time since the 1950s, as the country confronts an ageing population and a dwindling pension budget.
The top legislative body yesterday approved proposals to raise the statutory retirement age from 50 to 55 for women in blue-collar jobs, and from 55 to 58 for females in white-collar jobs.
Men will see an increase from 60 to 63.
China’s current retirement ages are among the lowest in the world.
According to the plan passed yesterday, the change will set in from January 1, 2025, with the respective retirement ages raised every few months over the next 15 years, said Chinese state media.
Retiring before the statutory age will not be allowed, state news agency Xinhua reported, although people can delay their retirement by no more than three years.
Starting 2030, employees will also have to make more contributions to the social security system in order to receive pensions. By 2039, they would have to clock 20 years of contributions to access their pensions.
China’s huge population has fallen for a second consecutive year in 2023 as its birth rate continues to decline.
Meanwhile, its average life expectancy has risen to 78.2 years, officials said earlier this year. According to the World Health Organisation, almost a third of China’s population – about 402 million people – will be aged over 60 by 2040, up from 254m in 2019.
The state-run Chinese Academy of Social Sciences said in 2019 that the country’s main state pension fund will run out of money by 2035 – and that was an estimate before the Covid-19 pandemic, which hit China’s economy hard.
The plan to raise retirement ages and adjust the pension policy was based on “a comprehensive assessment of the average life expectancy, health conditions, the population structure, the level of education and workforce supply in China,” Xinhua reported.
But the announcement has drawn some scepticism and discontent on the Chinese internet.
“In the next 10 years, there will be another bill that will delay retirement until we are 80,” one user wrote on a Chinese social media site Weibo.
“What a miserable year! Middle-aged workers are faced with pay cuts and raised retirement ages. Those who are unemployed find it increasingly difficult to get jobs,” another chimed in.
“Men in most European countries retire when they are 65 or 67, while women do at 60. This is going to be the trend in our country as well,” one Weibo user said.