As China’s birth rate plunges to record lows, the country’s leaders have responded by offering childcare subsidies, expanded maternity leave, free preschool, and cash incentives for young families. The government is aware of the problem, but its proffered solutions assume that family planning is primarily shaped by the immediate costs of raising children.
For many Chinese families, particularly those from rural areas, a more pressing financial concern lies at the opposite end of the life cycle.
The problem of elder poverty deserves more attention in discussing China’s demographic woes. Fertility policy typically focuses on reducing the cost of childrearing. Yet when older parents lack adequate pension income, adult children become their safety net. That responsibility shapes career choices, savings, marriage decisions, and ultimately whether starting a family feels financially feasible.
For many Chinese couples, the question is not simply whether they can afford children, but whether they have the financial means to care for both children and aging parents.
According to China’s Ministry of Civil Affairs, 33.6 million rural residents received minimum subsistence assistance (低保) in 2024, including more than 13 million elderly people. Another 4.4 million rural residents were officially classified as “extremely poor,” nearly 3.5 million of whom were elderly. These figures represent millions of older rural Chinese whose economic insecurity continues to shape the financial calculations of younger generations.
A migrant worker in China could expect to earn an average of 4,961 yuan per month as of 2024. That’s under $750. That monthly income is often supporting multiple people: not only the worker but their spouse and children – and, for many, aging parents with limited pension income. Financial transfers to parents therefore come from already constrained household budgets.
Workers supporting elderly parents have less flexibility to leave insecure jobs, pursue retraining, relocate for better opportunities, or tolerate temporary income losses associated with career advancement.
At the same time, China’s migrant workforce is itself aging, with nearly one-third already over the age of 50. Workers who cannot save because their paychecks are going toward caring for aging parents will, in turn, be forced to rely on their own children for support in the coming years. Marriage and childbearing become risks when financial insecurity accumulates across generations.
This dynamic became visible in Chinese social media discussions earlier this year after a widely shared post argued that increasing rural pensions might contribute more to family stability than the government’s modest newborn subsidies. The thousands of comments that followed offered a consistent picture of everyday financial anxiety. Users described grandparents continuing to weed vegetable plots, weave fishing nets, or take on casual labor well into their 70s – not because they wanted to work, but because they were determined to avoid asking their children for money. Others described parents refusing medical treatment, declining to help care for grandchildren, or insisting that pensions of only one or two hundred yuan per month were “good enough.”
One figure appeared repeatedly throughout these discussions: 500 yuan per month. Commenters saw that number as enough to purchase medicine independently, cover basic daily expenses, and allow elderly parents to give grandchildren a small red envelope during holidays instead of relying entirely on financial support from their children. The discussion suggested that dignity, not simply income, was at stake.
The government’s recent pension adjustments indicate that policymakers recognize the issue. China’s 2024 Government Work Report increased the monthly minimum basic old-age benefit for rural residents and non-working urban residents by 20 yuan, followed by another 20-yuan increase in the 2025 report. But the scale of the increase remains modest relative to the financial pressures documented in household-level data. Whether an extra 40 yuan a month can meaningfully reduce financial dependence within families remains an open question.
Rural pensions are a hidden constraint on China’s birthrate. Marriage in contemporary China generally involves more than the union of two individuals; it is a joining of two family support systems. Prospective couples evaluate not only each other’s education and income but also the financial circumstances of both sets of parents. Whether elderly parents have reliable pensions, whether routine living expenses are covered, and whether future medical costs might eventually fall on the younger generation all influence perceptions of the long-term costs of marriage. Several social media commenters noted bluntly that families without basic pension security occupy a weaker position in the marriage market.
The implications extend beyond marriage itself. When elderly parents remain economically dependent on their children, family relationships become fraught with expectations about where adult children should live, who should provide care, and how family resources should be allocated. Daughters and daughters-in-law frequently shoulder disproportionate responsibility for maintaining these arrangements. Stronger old-age protection would not eliminate these dynamics, but it could reduce the economic pressures that reinforce them. Many behaviors often described simply as “traditional family values” are actually responses to material insecurity.
Improving rural pensions may also advance another of Beijing’s priorities: expanding domestic consumption. Rural residents’ per capita disposable income reached 23,119 yuan in 2024, less than half the urban figure of 54,188 yuan. Additional pension income for lower-income elderly households is unlikely to accumulate in financial assets. It is far more likely to be spent on food, medicine, transportation, and local services, precisely the forms of consumption policymakers have sought to stimulate as China’s economic growth slows.
Raising rural pensions won’t magically reverse China’s demographic decline. Fertility decisions are shaped by a wide range of factors: housing costs, employment insecurity, gender inequality, childcare availability, and broader economic expectations. Significantly expanding rural pensions could also be a heavy fiscal lift, particularly given mounting pressures on local government finances and China’s broader pension system.
Even so, strengthening rural old-age security may offer broad returns across multiple policy objectives. Better pensions would reduce elderly poverty, ease intergenerational financial obligations, support household consumption, and give younger adults greater financial freedom to make decisions about work, marriage, and childbearing.
China’s fertility debate has spent years asking what families need to raise children. An equally important question is what families need to ensure that parents can grow old without depending almost entirely on their children. Until younger adults believe that old age no longer means inheriting another generation’s financial insecurity, policies focused solely on lowering the cost of childrearing are likely to produce only limited demographic gains.
