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Population history of China

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The population history of China covers the long-term pattern of population growth in China and its impact on the history of China. The population went through many cycles that generally reached peaks along each imperial power and was decimated due to wars and barbarian invasions. The census data shows that the population as percentage share of the world has a long-term average of 26%, with 6% standard deviation. The minimum could be as low as 16% while the maximum as high as 33%. In the late 19th century and the early 20th century, the percentage share has been trending down. This was caused by two opposite factors: On one hand, the world population has been growing explosively. On the other hand, in order to address the poverty issue, China implemented a strict birth control policy. For recent trends see demographics of China and China.

Census data

Period[1][2][3][4] Year Census Households Census Population Modern estimates Share of World population
Warring States -423 43,740,000 27%
Western Han -200 42,000,000 28%
Western Han 1 12,366,470 59,594,979 65,000,000 30%
Eastern Han 156 16,070,906 50,068,856 65,000,000 31%
Eastern Han 200 60,800,000 32%
Western Jin 280 6,801,000 8,200,000 37,986,000 20%
Western Jin 300 35,000,000 18%
Sixteen Kingdoms 400 51,300,000 27%
Northern and Southern dynasties 500 51,300,000 17%
Sui 600 8,700,000 44,500,000 46,000,000 23%
Tang 700 6,156,141 37,140,001 48,300,000 23%
Tang 755 8,914,709 52,919,309 90,000,000 15%
Tang 800 50,600,000 11.92%
Tang 900 39,000,000 16%
Northern Song 1000 60,950,000 23%
Northern Song 1100 110,750,000 21.67%
Southern Song and Jin 1200 140,000,000 28.33%
Yuan 1290 13,196,206 58,834,711 75,306,000 20%
Yuan 1351 27,650,000 87,587,000 120,359,000 30%
Ming 1393 10,699,399 58,323,934 65,000,000 19%
Ming 1400 11,415,829 66,598,339 81,000,000 23%
Ming 1500 10,508,935 60,105,835 110,000,000 26%
Ming 1550 10,621,436 60,692,856 145,000,000 29.17%
Ming 1600 197,000,000 32.83%
Qing 1650 123,000,000 140,000,000 21.54%
Qing 1700 126,110,000 160,000,000 22.86%
Qing 1750 181,810,000 225,000,000 25.85%
Qing 1800 297,623,950 330,000,000 30.4%
Qing 1850 430,000,000 436,100,000 33.05%
Republic of China 1928 474,780,000 474,780,000 24%
People's Republic of China 1950 546,815,000 552,000,000 22%
PRC 1975 916,395,000 920,940,000 23%
PRC 1982 1,008,180,000 1,022,250,000 22%
PRC 2000 1,262,645,000 1,283,190,000 21%
PRC 2005 1,303,720,000 1,321,620,000 20%
PRC 2010 1,337,825,000 1,359,760,000 20%
PRC 2015 1,374,620,000 1,397,030,000 19%
PRC 2020 1,411,778,724 1,447,084,648 17.8%

Han, 202 BC – 220 AD

A painted ceramic architectural model—found in a Han tomb—depicting an urban residential tower with verandas, tiled rooftops, dougong support brackets, and a covered bridge extending from the third floor to another tower

During the Warring States period (475–221 BC), the development of private commerce, new trade routes, handicraft industries, and a money economy led to the growth of new urban centers. These centers were markedly different from the older cities, which had merely served as power bases for the nobility.[5] The use of a standardized, nationwide currency during the Qin dynasty (221–206 BC) facilitated long-distance trade between cities.[6] Many Han cities grew large: the Western Han capital, Chang'an, had approximately 250,000 inhabitants, while the Eastern Han capital, Luoyang, had approximately 500,000 inhabitants.[7] The population of the Han Empire, recorded in the tax census of 156 AD, was 50.6 million people in 12,366,470 households.[8] The majority of commoners who populated the cities lived in extended urban and suburban areas outside the city walls and gatehouses.[9]

Trends: Tang to Southern Song

Demographic historian Angus Maddison uses extensive data to argue that the main base of the Chinese economy shifted southwards between about 750 AD and 1250 AD. In 750 three quarters of the population lived in the rural north, growing wheat and millet. By about 1250 three quarters lived south of the Yangtze and grew mainly rice. By 1000 AD per capita income in China was higher than the Europe average at the same time. Divergence took place in the fifteenth and eighteenth centuries as the European economy grew faster. From 1250 to 1900 China saw a fourfold increase in population whilst maintaining an average per capita income more or less stable. The main explanations were peace, irrigation, and fast-ripening seeds that permitted two crops a year. Chinese total GDP grew faster than that of Western Europe from 1700 to 1820, even though European per capita income grew faster.[10][11]

Ming, 1368 – 1644

Sinologist historians debate the population figures for each era in the Ming dynasty. The historian Timothy Brook notes that the Ming government census figures are dubious since fiscal obligations prompted many families to underreport the number of people in their households and many county officials to underreport the number of households in their jurisdiction.[12] Children were often underreported, especially female children, as shown by skewed population statistics throughout the Ming. Even adult women were underreported; for example, the Daming Prefecture in North Zhili reported a population of 378,167 males and 226,982 females in 1502.[13] The government attempted to revise the census figures using estimates of the expected average number of people in each household, but this did not solve the widespread problem of tax registration. Some part of the gender imbalance may be attributed to the practice of female infanticide. The practice is well documented in China, going back over two thousand years, and it was described as "rampant" and "practiced by almost every family" by contemporary authors.[14] However, the dramatically skewed sex ratios, which many counties reported exceeding 2:1 by 1586, cannot likely be explained by infanticide alone.[13]

The Xuande Emperor (r. 1425–35); he mistakenly stated in 1428 that his populace was dwindling due to palace construction and military adventures. But the population was rising under him, a fact noted in a 1432 report.[15]

The number of people counted in the census of 1381 was 59,873,305; however, this number dropped significantly when the government found that some 3 million people were missing from the tax census of 1391. Even though underreporting figures was made a capital crime in 1381, the need for survival pushed many to abandon the tax registration and wander from their region, where Hongwu had attempted to impose rigid immobility on the populace. The government tried to mitigate this by creating their own conservative estimate of 60,545,812 people in 1393.[15] In his Studies on the Population of China, Ho Ping-ti suggests revising the 1393 census to 65 million people, noting that large areas of North China and frontier areas were not counted in that census.[16] Brook states that the population figures gathered in the official censuses after 1393 ranged between 51 and 62 million, while the population was in fact increasing.[15] Even the Hongzhi Emperor (r. 1487–1505) remarked that the daily increase in subjects coincided with the daily dwindling amount of registered civilians and soldiers.[17] William Atwell states that around 1400 the population of China was perhaps 90 million people, citing Heijdra and Mote.[18]

Historians are now turning to local gazetteers of Ming China for clues that would show consistent growth in population. Using the gazetteers, Brook estimates that the overall population under the Chenghua Emperor (r. 1464–87) was roughly 75 million, despite mid-Ming census figures hovering around 62 million. While prefectures across the empire in the mid-Ming period were reporting either a drop in or stagnant population size, local gazetteers reported massive amounts of incoming vagrant workers with not enough good cultivated land for them to till, so that many would become drifters, conmen, or wood-cutters that contributed to deforestation. The Hongzhi and Zhengde emperors lessened the penalties against those who had fled their home region, while the Jiajing Emperor (r. 1521–67) finally had officials register migrants wherever they had moved or fled in order to bring in more revenues.[19]

Even with the Jiajing reforms to document migrant workers and merchants, by the late Ming era the government census still did not accurately reflect the enormous growth in population. Gazetteers across the empire noted this and made their own estimations of the overall population in the Ming, some guessing that it had doubled, tripled, or even grown fivefold since 1368. Fairbank estimates that the population was perhaps 160 million in the late Ming dynasty,[20] while Brook estimates 175 million,[21] and Ebrey states perhaps as large as 200 million.[22] However, a great epidemic that entered China through the northwest in 1641 ravaged the densely populated areas along the Grand Canal; a gazetteer in northern Zhejiang noted more than half the population fell ill that year and that 90% of the local populace in one area was dead by 1642.[23]

Qing, 1644 – 1911

The most significant facts of early and mid-Qing social history was growth in population, population density, and mobility. The population in 1700, according to widely accepted estimates, was roughly 150 million, about what it had been under the late Ming a century before, then doubled over the next century, and reached a height of 450 million on the eve of the Taiping Rebellion in 1850.[24] The food supply increased due to better irrigation and especially the introduction of fast-maturing rice seeds, which permitted harvesting two or even three crops a year on the same land. An additional factor was the spread of New World crops like peanuts, potatoes, and especially sweet potatoes. They helped to sustain the people during shortages of harvest for crops such as rice or wheat. These crops could be grown under harsher conditions, and thus were cheaper as well, which led to them becoming staples for poorer farmers, decreasing the number of deaths from malnutrition. Diseases such as smallpox, widespread in the seventeenth century, were brought under control by an increase in inoculations. In addition, infant deaths were also greatly decreased due to improvements in birthing techniques and childcare performed by midwives and doctors. Government campaigns lowered the incidence of infanticide. Unlike Europe, where numerical growth in this period was greatest in the cities, in China the growth in cities and the lower Yangzi was low. The greatest growth was in the borderlands and the highlands, where farmers could clear large tracts of marshlands and forests.[25]

The population was also remarkably mobile, perhaps more so than at any time in Chinese history. Indeed, the Qing government did far more to encourage mobility than to discourage it. Millions of Han Chinese migrated to Yunnan and Guizhou in the 18th century, and also to Taiwan. After the conquests of the 1750s and 1760s, the court organized agricultural colonies in Xinjiang. Migration might be permanent, for resettlement, or the migrants (in theory at least) might regard the move as a sojourn. The latter included an increasingly large and mobile workforce. Local-origin-based merchant groups also moved freely. This mobility also included the organized movement of Qing subjects overseas, largely to Southeastern Asia, in search of trade and other economic opportunities.[26]

Famines

Chinese officials engaged in famine relief, 19th-century engraving

Chinese scholars had kept count of 1,828 instances of famine from 108 BC to 1911 in one province or another—an average of close to one famine per year. From 1333 to 1337 a famine in the north killed 6 million Chinese. The four famines of 1810, 1811, 1846, and 1849 cost perhaps 45 million lives.[27][28]

The period from 1850 to 1873 saw, as a result of the Taiping Rebellion, drought, and famine, the population of China drop by over 30 million people.[29] China's Qing Dynasty bureaucracy, which devoted extensive attention to minimizing famines, is credited with averting a series of famines following El Niño-Southern Oscillation-linked droughts and floods. These events are comparable, though somewhat smaller in scale, to the ecological trigger events of China's vast 19th-century famines.[30] Qing China carried out its relief efforts, which included vast shipments of food, a requirement that the rich open their storehouses to the poor, and price regulation, as part of a state guarantee of subsistence to the peasantry (known as ming-sheng).

When a stressed monarchy shifted from state management and direct shipments of grain to monetary charity in the mid-19th century, the system broke down. Thus the 1867–68 famine under the Tongzhi Restoration was successfully relieved but the Great North China Famine of 1877–78, caused by drought across northern China, was a catastrophe. The province of Shanxi was substantially depopulated as grains ran out, and desperately starving people stripped forests, fields, and their very houses for food. Estimated mortality is 9.5 to 13 million people.[31]

Great Leap Forward: 1958–1961

The largest famine of the 20th century, and almost certainly of all time, was the 1958–1961 famine associated with the Great Leap Forward in China. The immediate causes of this famine lay in Mao Zedong's ill-fated attempt to transform China from an agricultural nation to an industrial power in one huge leap. Communist Party cadres across China insisted that peasants abandon their farms for collective farms, and begin to produce steel in small foundries, often melting down their farm instruments in the process. Collectivisation undermined incentives for the investment of labor and resources in agriculture; unrealistic plans for decentralized metal production sapped needed labor; unfavorable weather conditions; and communal dining halls encouraged overconsumption of available food.[32] Such was the centralized control of information and the intense pressure on party cadres to report only good news—such as production quotas met or exceeded—that information about the escalating disaster was effectively suppressed. When the leadership did become aware of the scale of the famine, it did little to respond, and continued to ban any discussion of the cataclysm. This blanket suppression of news was so effective that very few Chinese citizens were aware of the scale of the famine, and the greatest peacetime demographic disaster of the 20th century only became widely known twenty years later, when the veil of censorship began to lift.

The number of famine deaths during 1958–1961 range from 18 million[33] to at least 42 million[34] people, with a further 30 million cancelled or delayed births.[35] Agricultural collectivisation policies began to be reversed in 1978.[36]

Chinese Diaspora

Chinese emigration first occurred thousands of years ago. The mass emigration that occurred from the 19th century to 1949 was caused mainly by wars and starvation in mainland China, as well as political corruption. Most migrants were illiterate or poorly educated peasants, called by the now-recognized racial slur coolies (Chinese: 苦力, literally "hard labor"), who migrated to developing countries in need of labor, such as the Americas, Australia, South Africa, Southeast Asia, Malaya and other places.[37][38]

In 2009, there were 40-45 million overseas Chinese. They lived in 180 countries; 75% lived in Southeast Asia, and 19% in the United States.[39]

In 2011, 73.3% of overseas Chinese lived in 35 Asia countries, and 18.6% in 40 countries of the Americas.[40]

One-Child policy

From 1980 to 2015, the government of China permitted the great majority of families to have only one child.[41] The ongoing Cultural Revolution and the strain it placed on the nation were large factors. During this time, the birth rate dropped from nearly 6 children per woman to just under 3.[42] (The colloquial term "births per woman" is usually formalized as the Total Fertility Rate (TFR), a technical term in demographic analysis meaning the average number of children that would be born to a woman over her lifetime if she were to experience the exact current age-specific fertility rates through her lifetime.)

As China's youngest generation (born under the one-child policy) came of age for formation of the next generation, a single child would be left with having to provide support for their two parents and four grandparents. By 2014 families could have two children if one of the parents is an only child.[43][44]

The policy was supposedly voluntary. It was more strongly enforced in urban areas, where housing was in very short supply. Policies included free contraceptives, financial and employment incentives, economic penalties, and sometimes forced abortions and sterilizations.[45]

Two-child policy

After 2000 the policy was steadily relaxed. Han Chinese living in rural areas were often permitted to have two children, as exceptions existed if the first child was a daughter.[46] Because of cases such as these, as well as urban couples who simply paid a fine (or "social maintenance fee") to have more children,[47] the overall fertility rate of mainland China during the 2000s was, in fact, around 1.8, closer to two children per family than to one child per family. In addition, since 2012, Han Chinese in southern Xinjiang were allowed to have two children. This, along with incentives and restrictions against higher Muslim Uyghur fertility, was seen as attempt to counter the threat of Uyghur separatism.[48]

In 2016 the national policy changed to a two-child policy; in 2018 it changed to a three-policy.[49] The new policies were meant to help address the aging issue in China.[50]

In 2018, about two years after the new policy reform, China is facing new ramifications from the two-child policy. Since the revision of the one-child policy, 90 million women have become eligible to have a second child.[51] According to The Economist, the new two-child policy may have negative implications on gender roles, with new expectations for women to bear more children and to abandon their careers.[52]

After the reform, China saw a short-lived boost in fertility rate for 2016. Chinese women gave birth to 17.9 million babies in 2016 (a record value in the 21st century), but the number of births declined by 3.5% to 17.2 million in 2017,[52] and to 15.2 million in 2018.[53][54]

In China, men still have greater marital power, which increases fertility pressure on their female partners.[51] The dynamic of relationships (amount of "power" held by each parent), and the amount of resources each parent has contributes to the struggle for dominance.[55] Resources would be items such as income, and health insurance. Dominance would be described as who has the final say in pregnancy, who has to resign in their career for maternal/parental leave. However, women have shown interest in a second child if the first child did not possess the desired gender.[52]

Chinese couples were also polled and stated that they would rather invest in one child opposed to two children.[51] To add, another concern for couples would be the high costs of raising another child; China's childcare system needs to be further developed.[56] The change in cultural norms appears to be having negative consequences and leads to fear of a large aging population with smaller younger generations; thus the lack of workforce to drive the economy.[55]

In May 2018, it was reported that Chinese authorities were in the process of ending their population control policies.[57] In May 2021, the Chinese government announced it would scrap the two child policy in favour of a three child policy, allowing couples to have three children in order to mitigate the country's falling birth rates.[58][59]

Three-child policy

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Broadberry, (2018), pp 990–994.
  2. ^ Banister, (1992), pp. 52–53.
  3. ^ Maddison, (2006), p. 167.
  4. ^ Deng and Sun, (2019), pp 20–22.
  5. ^ Nishijima, "The economic and social history of Former Han", (1986), p. 574.
  6. ^ Bret Hinsch, Women in Imperial China (Rowman & Littlefield, 2002) p. 28.
  7. ^ Nishijima 1986, pp. 574–575
  8. ^ Schinz 1996, p. 136; Nishijima 1986, pp. 595–596.
  9. ^ Schinz 1996, p. 140; Wang 1982, pp. 1–4, & 30.
  10. ^ Maddison (2007) pp. 16–17.
  11. ^ Maddison, (2006) p. 241.
  12. ^ Timothy Brook, The Confusions of Pleasure: Commerce and Culture in Ming China (U of California Press, 1998) p. 27.
  13. ^ a b Brook, 1968, pp 97-99, 267.
  14. ^ Anne Behnke Kinney. Chinese views of childhood. pp. 200–01.
  15. ^ a b c Brook, 1968, p 28.
  16. ^ Ho, 1959, pp. 8–9, 22, 259.
  17. ^ Brook, 1968, p 95.
  18. ^ Atwell (2002), p. 86.
  19. ^ Brook, 1968, p 28, 94-96, 267.
  20. ^ Fairbank & Goldman (2006), p. 128.
  21. ^ Brook, 1968, p 162.
  22. ^ Ebrey (1999), p. 195.
  23. ^ Brook, 1968, p 163.
  24. ^ William T. Rowe, China's Last Empire: The Great Qing (2009) p. 91.
  25. ^ Rowe, 2009, pp. 91-92
  26. ^ Rowe, 2009, p. 92
  27. ^ Walter H. Mallory, China: Land of famine (1926) p.1
  28. ^ "FAEC — FEARFUL FAMINES OF THE PAST". Mitosyfraudes.org. Retrieved 1 February 2016.
  29. ^ Richard Hooker (14 July 1999). "Ch'ing China: The Taiping Rebellion". Archived from the original on 14 April 2011.
  30. ^ Pierre-Etienne Will, Bureaucracy and Famine
  31. ^ Dimensions of need – People and populations at risk. Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO).
  32. ^ Chang, Gene Hsin; Wen, Guanzhong James (October 1997). "Communal Dining and the Chinese Famine of 1958–1961". Economic Development and Cultural Change. 46 (1): 1–34. doi:10.1086/452319. S2CID 154835645.
  33. ^ Gráda, Cormac Ó (2011). "Great Leap into Famine". UCD Centre For Economic Research Working Paper Series: 9. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  34. ^ Dikötter, Frank. Mao's Great Famine: The History of China's Most Devastating Catastrophe, 1958–62. Walker & Company, 2010. p. xii.
  35. ^ Smil, V. (18 December 1999). "China's great famine: 40 years later". British Medical Journal. 319 (7225): 1619–1621. doi:10.1136/bmj.319.7225.1619. PMC 1127087. PMID 10600969.
  36. ^ Woo, Meredith Jung-En (2007). Neoliberalism and Institutional Reform in East Asia: A Comparative Study. Springer.
  37. ^ Chee-Beng Tan, ed. Routledge handbook of the Chinese diaspora (Routledge, 2013).
  38. ^ Ma, Laurence J. C.; Cartier, Carolyn L. (2003). The Chinese diaspora: space, place, mobility, and identity. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-0-7425-1756-1.
  39. ^ Chee-Beng Tan, ed. Routledge handbook of the Chinese diaspora (Routledge, 2013) pp 3–4.
  40. ^ Guo, Shibao (2022-03-12). "Reimagining Chinese diasporas in a transnational world: toward a new research agenda". Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies. 48 (4): 847–872. doi:10.1080/1369183X.2021.1983958. ISSN 1369-183X. S2CID 239897984.
  41. ^ See Encyclopedia Britannica, "One child policy"
  42. ^ "The World Factbook — Central Intelligence Agency". www.cia.gov.
  43. ^ Patti Waldmeir (15 November 2013). "China's 'one-child' rethink marks symbolic shift". FT. Retrieved 2013-11-19.
  44. ^ Ouyang, Y. (2013). "China relaxes its one-child policy". The Lancet. 382 (9907): e28–e30. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(13)62544-1. PMID 24298609. S2CID 31618458.
  45. ^ Encyclopedia Britannica, "One child policy".
  46. ^ Yardley, Jim (11 May 2008). "China Sticking With One-Child Policy". The New York Times. Retrieved 20 November 2008.
  47. ^ "New rich challenge family planning policy Archived 2007-10-15 at the Wayback Machine." Xinhua.
  48. ^ "The government in Xinjiang is trying to limit Muslim births". The Economist. 7 November 2015. Retrieved 10 November 2015.
  49. ^ "China to allow three". BBC. 29 October 2018 online.
  50. ^ "News Analysis: Two-child policy calls for better public services - Xinhua | English.news.cn". news.xinhuanet.com. Archived from the original on October 31, 2015. Retrieved 2015-10-31.
  51. ^ a b c "China's two-child policy may exacerbate gender inequality". ScienceDaily. Retrieved 2018-03-27.
  52. ^ a b c "China is in a muddle over population policy". The Economist. 8 February 2018. Retrieved 2018-03-27.
  53. ^ Leng, Sidney (21 January 2019). "China's birth rate falls to its lowest rate since 1961". South China Morning Post. Retrieved 2019-01-22.
  54. ^ "China's Debate Over a Shrinking Birth Rate Highlights Growth Concerns". Bloomberg. 4 January 2019 [3 January 2019]. Retrieved 2022-03-23.
  55. ^ a b Qian, Yue; Jin, Yongai (21 February 2018). "Women's Fertility Autonomy in Urban China: The Role of Couple Dynamics Under the Universal Two-Child Policy". Chinese Sociological Review. 50 (3): 275–309. doi:10.1080/21620555.2018.1428895. S2CID 158137927.
  56. ^ "No Easing of Two-Child Policy, Official Says - Caixin Global". www.caixinglobal.com. Retrieved 2018-04-10.
  57. ^ Beijing, Didi Tang (22 May 2018). "China to scrap family planning rules as birthrate dwindles". The Times. ISSN 0140-0460. Retrieved 2018-05-22.
  58. ^ Wee, Sui-Lee (31 May 2021). "China Says It Will Allow Couples to Have 3 Children, Up From 2". The New York Times. Retrieved 31 May 2021.
  59. ^ "China announces three-child policy in a major policy shift". CNBC. 31 May 2021. Retrieved 31 May 2021.

Further reading

  • Alpermann, Björn, and Shaohua Zhan. "Population planning after the one-child policy: shifting modes of political steering in China." Journal of Contemporary China 28.117 (2019): 348-366 online[dead link].
  • Atwell, William S. "Time, Money, and the Weather: Ming China and the 'Great Depression' of the Mid-Fifteenth Century", Journal of Asian Studies (2002), 61#1: 83–113, online
  • Banister, Judith. "A Brief History of China's Population," in Poston and Yaukey, eds. The Population of Modern China (1992). pp. 51–57. online
  • Banister, Judith. "An analysis of recent data on the population of China." Population and Development review (1984) 10#2: 241-271 online.
  • Broadberry, Stephen, Hanhui Guan, and David Daokui Li. "China, Europe, and the great divergence: a study in historical national accounting, 980–1850." Journal of Economic History 78.4 (2018): 955–1000. online
  • Brook, Timothy. The Confusions of Pleasure: Commerce and Culture in Ming China (U of California Press, 1998) excerpt
  • Chai, Joseph C. H. An economic history of modern China (Edward Elgar, 2011).
  • Chen, Ta. Population in modern China (1946) online
  • Deng, Kent and Shengmin, Sun. "China’s extraordinary population expansion and its determinants during the qing period, 1644-1911" Population Review (2019), 58#1: 20–77. ISSN 0032-471X https://doi.org/10.1353/prv.2019.0001
  • Deng, Kent G. "Unveiling China's true population statistics for the pre-modern era with official census data." Population Review 43.2 (2004): 32–69.
  • Dikötter, Frank. Mao's Great Famine : the history of China's most devastating catastrophe, 1958-62 (2011) online
  • Durand, John D. “The Population Statistics of China, A.D. 2-1953.” Population Studies 13#3 (1960), pp. 209–256. online
  • Ebrey, Patricia Buckley, ed. The Cambridge Illustrated History of China (1999)
  • Evans, Laurence. “Junks, Rice, and Empire: Civil Logistics and the Mandate of Heaven.” Historical Reflections / Réflexions Historiques 11#3 (1984_, pp. 271–313. online
  • Fairbank, John King, and Merle Goldman. China: A New History (2nd ed Harvard UP, 2006) online 1st edition.
  • Fairbank, John King. The United States and China (4th ed. 1976) online
  • Feng, Wang; Campbell, Cameron; Lee, James. "Infant and Child Mortality among the Qing Nobility." Population Studies (Nov 1994) 48#3 pp 395–411; many upper-class Chinese couples regularly used infanticide to control the number and sex of their infants.
  • Feng, Wang, et al. “Population, Policy, and Politics: How Will History Judge China's One-Child Policy?” Population and Development Review, vol. 38, (2013), pp. 115–129. online
  • Fong, Mei. One Child: The Story of China's Most Radical Experiment (2015), popular journalism excerpt
  • Geping, Qu, and Lin Jinchang. Population and the Environment in China (Rienner, 1994). abstract
  • Goldstone, Jack A. Revolution and Rebellion in the Early Modern World (1991) covers population change and state breakdown in England, France, Turkey, and China, 1600–1850.
  • Goldstone, Jack A. "East and West in the seventeenth century: political crises in Stuart England, Ottoman Turkey, and Ming China." Comparative Studies in Society and History 30.1 (1988): 103-142 online.
  • Ho, Ping-ti. The ladder of success in Imperial China; aspects of social mobility, 1368-1911 (1964) online
  • Ho, Ping-ti. Studies on the Population of China, 1368-1953 (Harvard UP, 1959) online. also online review
  • Keyfitz, Nathan. "The population of China." Scientific American 250.2 (1984): 38-47 online.
  • Lee, Bernice J. “Female Infanticide in China.” Historical Reflections / Réflexions Historiques 8#3 (1981), pp. 163–177 online
  • Liu, Paul K. C. and Kuo-shu Hwang. “Population Change and Economic Development in Mainland China since 1400.” in Modern Chinese Economic History, edited by Chiming Hou and Tzongs-hian Yu (Taipei: Academia Sinica, 1979) pp. 61–90.
  • Maddison, Angus. Chinese Economic Performance in the Long Run: 960-2030 AD (2nd ed. Paris, OECD, 2007) Economic Performance in the Long Run.pdf online; also online review
  • Maddison, Angus. "China in the world economy: 1300-2030." International Journal of Business 11.3 (2006): 239–254. online
    • Perkins, Dwight H. "Stagnation and Growth in China over the Millennium: A Comment on Angus Maddison's 'China in the World Economy, 1300-2030'." International Journal of Business 11.3 (2006): 255–264. online.
  • Mallory, Walter H. China: Land of famine (1926) online.
  • Nishijima, Sadao. "The Economic and Social History of Former Han", in Denis Twitchett, and Michael Loewe, eds., Cambridge History of China: Volume I: the Ch'in and Han Empires, 221 B.C. – A.D. 220 (Cambridge UP, 1986), pp. 545–607.
  • Pan, Chia-lin, and Irene B. Taeuber. “The Expansion of The Chinese: North and West.” Population Index 18#2 (1952(, pp. 85–108 online
  • Peng, Xizhe. "Demographic consequences of the Great Leap Forward in China's provinces." Population and development review (1987) 13#4: 639-670 online.
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