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China

China (Chinese: 中国; pinyin: Zhōngguó), officially the People's Republic of China (PRC),[k] is a country in East Asia. It is the world's most populous country, with a population exceeding 1.4 billion, slightly ahead of India. China spans the equivalent of five time zones and borders fourteen countries by land,[l] the most of any country in the world, tied with Russia. Covering an area of approximately 9.6 million square kilometres (3,700,000 sq mi), it is the world's third largest country by total land area.[m] The country consists of 22 provinces,[n] five autonomous regions, four municipalities, and two Special Administrative Regions (Hong Kong and Macau). The national capital is Beijing, and the most populous city and financial center is Shanghai.

People's Republic of China
中华人民共和国 (Chinese)
Zhōnghuá Rénmín Gònghéguó (Pinyin)
Anthem: 
义勇军进行曲
Yìyǒngjūn Jìnxíngqǔ
"March of the Volunteers"
Territory controlled by the People's Republic of China shown in dark green; territory claimed but not controlled shown in light green
CapitalBeijing
39°55′N 116°23′E / 39.917°N 116.383°E / 39.917; 116.383
Largest city
by population
Shanghai
Official languagesStandard Chinese[a]
Recognized regional languages
Official scriptSimplified Chinese[b]
Ethnic groups
(2020)[1]
Religion
(2020)[2]
Demonym(s)Chinese
GovernmentUnitary Marxist–Leninist one-party socialist republic
Xi Jinping
• Premier
Li Keqiang
Li Zhanshu
Wang Yang
LegislatureNational People's Congress
Formation
c. 2070 BCE
221 BCE
1 January 1912
1 October 1949
20 September 1954
4 December 1982
20 December 1999
Area
• Total
9,596,961 km2 (3,705,407 sq mi)[g][5] (3rd / 4th)
• Water (%)
2.8[h]
Population
• 2022 estimate
1,410,539,758[7] (1st)
• 2020 census
1,411,778,724[8] (1st)
• Density
145[9]/km2 (375.5/sq mi) (83rd)
GDP (PPP)2022 estimate
• Total
$30.074 trillion[10] (1st)
• Per capita
$21,291[10] (72nd)
GDP (nominal)2022 estimate
• Total
$18.321 trillion[i][10] (2nd)
• Per capita
$12,970[10] (65th)
Gini (2019) 38.2[11]
medium
HDI (2021) 0.768[12]
high · 79th
CurrencyRenminbi (元/¥)[j] (CNY)
Time zoneUTC+8 (CST)
DST is not observed
Date format
Driving sideright (Mainland)
left (Hong Kong and Macau)
Calling code+86 (Mainland)
+852 (Hong Kong)
+853 (Macau)
ISO 3166 codeCN
Internet TLD

Modern Chinese trace their origins to a cradle of civilization in the fertile basin of the Yellow River in the North China Plain. The semi-legendary Xia dynasty in the 21st century BCE and the well-attested Shang and Zhou dynasties developed a bureaucratic political system to serve hereditary monarchies, or dynasties. Chinese writing, Chinese classic literature, and the Hundred Schools of Thought emerged during this period and influenced China and its neighbors for centuries to come. In the third century BCE, Qin's wars of unification created the first Chinese empire, the short-lived Qin dynasty. The Qin was followed by the more stable Han dynasty (206 BCE – 220 CE), which established a model for nearly two millennia in which the Chinese empire was one of the world's foremost economic powers. The empire expanded, fractured and re-unified, was conquered and reestablished, absorbed foreign religions and ideas, and made world-leading scientific advances, such as the Four Great Inventions: gunpowder, paper, the compass, and printing. After centuries of disunion following the fall of the Han, the Sui (581–618) and Tang (618–907) dynasties reunified the empire. The multi-ethnic Tang welcomed foreign trade and culture that came over the Silk Road and adapted Buddhism to Chinese needs. The early modern Song dynasty (960–1279) became increasingly urban and commercial. The civilian scholar-official or literati used the examination system and the doctrines of Neo-Confucianism to replace the military aristocrats of earlier dynasties. The Mongol invasion established the Yuan dynasty in 1279, but the Ming dynasty (1368–1644) re-established Han Chinese control. The Manchu-led Qing dynasty nearly doubled the empire's territory and established a multi-ethnic state that was the basis of the modern Chinese nation, but suffered heavy losses to foreign imperialism in the 19th century.

The Chinese monarchy collapsed in 1912 with the Xinhai Revolution, when the Republic of China (ROC) replaced the Qing dynasty. In its early years as a republic, the country underwent a period of instability known as the Warlord Era before mostly reunifying in 1928 under a Nationalist government. A civil war between the nationalist Kuomintang (KMT) and the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) began in 1927. Japan invaded China in 1937, starting the Second Sino-Japanese War and temporarily halting the civil war. The surrender and expulsion of Japanese forces from China in 1945 left a power vacuum in the country, which led to renewed fighting between the CCP and the Kuomintang. The civil war ended in 1949[o] with the division of Chinese territory; the CCP established the People's Republic of China on the mainland while the Kuomintang-led ROC government retreated to the island of Taiwan.[p] Both claim to be the sole legitimate government of China, although the United Nations has recognized the PRC as the sole representation since 1971. From 1959 to 1961, the PRC implemented an economic and social campaign called the Great Leap Forward, that resulted in a sharp economic decline and an estimated 15 to 55 million deaths, mostly through man-made famine. From 1966 to 1976, the turbulent period of political and social chaos within China known as the Cultural Revolution led to greater economic and educational decline, with millions being purged or subjected to either persecution or politicide based on political categories. Since then, the Chinese government has rebuked some of the earlier Maoist policies, conducting a series of political and economic reforms since 1978, which has greatly raised Chinese standards of living, and increased life expectancies.

China is currently governed as a unitary Marxist–Leninist one-party socialist republic by the CCP. China is a permanent member of the United Nations Security Council and a founding member of several multilateral and regional cooperation organizations such as the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank, the Silk Road Fund, the New Development Bank, the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation, and the RCEP, and is a member of the BRICS, the G8+5, the G20, the APEC, and the East Asia Summit. It ranks among the lowest in measurements of democracy, civil liberties, government transparency, freedom of the press, freedom of religion, and human rights of ethnic minorities. The Chinese authorities have been criticized by human rights activists and non-governmental organizations for human rights abuses, including political repression, mass censorship, mass surveillance of their citizens, and violent suppression of protest and dissent.

Making up around one-fifth of the world economy, China is the world's largest economy by GDP by purchasing power parity, the second-largest economy by nominal GDP, and the second-wealthiest country. The country is one of the fastest growing major economies and is the world's largest manufacturer and exporter, as well as the second-largest importer. China is a recognized nuclear-weapon state with the world's largest standing army by military personnel and second-largest defense budget. China is considered to be a potential superpower due to its large markets, high innovation, economic potential, growing military strength, and influence in international affairs.

Etymology

 
China (today's Guangdong), Mangi (inland of Xanton), and Cataio (inland of China and Chequan, and including the capital Cambalu, Xandu, and a marble bridge) are all shown as separate regions on this 1570 map by Abraham Ortelius

The word "China" has been used in English since the 16th century; however, it was not a word used by the Chinese themselves during this period. Its origin has been traced through Portuguese, Malay, and Persian back to the Sanskrit word Chīna, used in ancient India.[18] "China" appears in Richard Eden's 1555 translation[q] of the 1516 journal of the Portuguese explorer Duarte Barbosa.[r][18] Barbosa's usage was derived from Persian Chīn (چین), which was in turn derived from Sanskrit Cīna (चीन).[23] Cīna was first used in early Hindu scripture, including the Mahābhārata (5th century BCE) and the Laws of Manu (2nd century BCE).[24] In 1655, Martino Martini suggested that the word China is derived ultimately from the name of the Qin dynasty (221–206 BCE).[25][24] Although usage in Indian sources precedes this dynasty, this derivation is still given in various sources.[26] The origin of the Sanskrit word is a matter of debate, according to the Oxford English Dictionary.[18] Alternative suggestions include the names for Yelang and the Jing or Chu state.[24][27] The official name of the modern state is the "People's Republic of China" (simplified Chinese: 中华人民共和国; traditional Chinese: 中華人民共和國; pinyin: Zhōnghuá Rénmín Gònghéguó). The shorter form is "China" Zhōngguó (中国; 中國) from zhōng ("central") and guó ("state"),[s] a term which developed under the Western Zhou dynasty in reference to its royal demesne.[t][u] It was then applied to the area around Luoyi (present-day Luoyang) during the Eastern Zhou and then to China's Central Plain before being used as an occasional synonym for the state under the Qing.[29] It was often used as a cultural concept to distinguish the Huaxia people from perceived "barbarians".[29] The name Zhongguo is also translated as "Middle Kingdom" in English.[32] China (PRC) is sometimes referred to as the Mainland when distinguishing the ROC from the PRC.[33][34][35][36]

History

Prehistory

 
10,000 years old pottery, Xianren Cave culture (18000–7000 BCE)

China is regarded as one of the world's oldest civilisations.[37][38] Archaeological evidence suggests that early hominids inhabited the country 2.25 million years ago.[39] The hominid fossils of Peking Man, a Homo erectus who used fire,[40] were discovered in a cave at Zhoukoudian near Beijing; they have been dated to between 680,000 and 780,000 years ago.[41] The fossilized teeth of Homo sapiens (dated to 125,000–80,000 years ago) have been discovered in Fuyan Cave in Dao County, Hunan.[42] Chinese proto-writing existed in Jiahu around 6600 BCE,[43] at Damaidi around 6000 BCE,[44] Dadiwan from 5800 to 5400 BCE, and Banpo dating from the 5th millennium BCE. Some scholars have suggested that the Jiahu symbols (7th millennium BCE) constituted the earliest Chinese writing system.[43]

Early dynastic rule

 
Yinxu, the ruins of the capital of the late Shang dynasty (14th century BCE)

According to Chinese tradition, the first dynasty was the Xia, which emerged around 2100 BCE.[45] The Xia dynasty marked the beginning of China's political system based on hereditary monarchies, or dynasties, which lasted for a millennium.[46] The Xia dynasty was considered mythical by historians until scientific excavations found early Bronze Age sites at Erlitou, Henan in 1959.[47] It remains unclear whether these sites are the remains of the Xia dynasty or of another culture from the same period.[48] The succeeding Shang dynasty is the earliest to be confirmed by contemporary records.[49] The Shang ruled the plain of the Yellow River in eastern China from the 17th to the 11th century BCE.[50] Their oracle bone script (from c. 1500 BCE)[51][52] represents the oldest form of Chinese writing yet found[53] and is a direct ancestor of modern Chinese characters.[54]

The Shang was conquered by the Zhou, who ruled between the 11th and 5th centuries BCE, though centralized authority was slowly eroded by feudal warlords. Some principalities eventually emerged from the weakened Zhou, no longer fully obeyed the Zhou king, and continually waged war with each other during the 300-year Spring and Autumn period. By the time of the Warring States period of the 5th–3rd centuries BCE, there were only seven powerful states left.[55]

Imperial China

 
China's first emperor, Qin Shi Huang, is famed for having united the Warring States' walls to form the Great Wall of China. Most of the present structure, however, dates to the Ming dynasty.

The Warring States period ended in 221 BCE after the state of Qin conquered the other six kingdoms, reunited China and established the dominant order of autocracy. King Zheng of Qin proclaimed himself the First Emperor of the Qin dynasty. He enacted Qin's legalist reforms throughout China, notably the forced standardization of Chinese characters, measurements, road widths (i.e., the cart axles' length), and currency. His dynasty also conquered the Yue tribes in Guangxi, Guangdong, and Vietnam.[56] The Qin dynasty lasted only fifteen years, falling soon after the First Emperor's death, as his harsh authoritarian policies led to widespread rebellion.[57][58]

Following a widespread civil war during which the imperial library at Xianyang was burned,[v] the Han dynasty emerged to rule China between 206 BCE and CE 220, creating a cultural identity among its populace still remembered in the ethnonym of the Han Chinese.[57][58] The Han expanded the empire's territory considerably, with military campaigns reaching Central Asia, Mongolia, South Korea, and Yunnan, and the recovery of Guangdong and northern Vietnam from Nanyue. Han involvement in Central Asia and Sogdia helped establish the land route of the Silk Road, replacing the earlier path over the Himalayas to India. Han China gradually became the largest economy of the ancient world.[60] Despite the Han's initial decentralization and the official abandonment of the Qin philosophy of Legalism in favor of Confucianism, Qin's legalist institutions and policies continued to be employed by the Han government and its successors.[61]

 
Map showing the expansion of Han dynasty in the 2nd century BC

After the end of the Han dynasty, a period of strife known as Three Kingdoms followed,[62] whose central figures were later immortalized in one of the Four Classics of Chinese literature. At its end, Wei was swiftly overthrown by the Jin dynasty. The Jin fell to civil war upon the ascension of a developmentally disabled emperor; the Five Barbarians then invaded and ruled northern China as the Sixteen States. The Xianbei unified them as the Northern Wei, whose Emperor Xiaowen reversed his predecessors' apartheid policies and enforced a drastic sinification on his subjects, largely integrating them into Chinese culture. In the south, the general Liu Yu secured the abdication of the Jin in favor of the Liu Song. The various successors of these states became known as the Northern and Southern dynasties, with the two areas finally reunited by the Sui in 581. The Sui restored the Han to power through China, reformed its agriculture, economy and imperial examination system, constructed the Grand Canal, and patronized Buddhism. However, they fell quickly when their conscription for public works and a failed war in northern Korea provoked widespread unrest.[63][64]

Under the succeeding Tang and Song dynasties, Chinese economy, technology, and culture entered a golden age.[65] The Tang dynasty retained control of the Western Regions and the Silk Road,[66] which brought traders to as far as Mesopotamia and the Horn of Africa,[67] and made the capital Chang'an a cosmopolitan urban center. However, it was devastated and weakened by the An Lushan Rebellion in the 8th century.[68] In 907, the Tang disintegrated completely when the local military governors became ungovernable. The Song dynasty ended the separatist situation in 960, leading to a balance of power between the Song and Khitan Liao. The Song was the first government in world history to issue paper money and the first Chinese polity to establish a permanent standing navy which was supported by the developed shipbuilding industry along with the sea trade.[69]

 
The Tang dynasty at its greatest extent and Tang's protectorates
 
A detail from Along the River During the Qingming Festival, a 12th-century painting showing everyday life in the Song dynasty's capital, Bianjing (present-day Kaifeng)

Between the 10th and 11th centuries, the population of China doubled in size to around 100 million people, mostly because of the expansion of rice cultivation in central and southern China, and the production of abundant food surpluses. The Song dynasty also saw a revival of Confucianism, in response to the growth of Buddhism during the Tang,[70] and a flourishing of philosophy and the arts, as landscape art and porcelain were brought to new levels of maturity and complexity.[71][72] However, the military weakness of the Song army was observed by the Jurchen Jin dynasty. In 1127, Emperor Huizong of Song and the capital Bianjing were captured during the Jin–Song Wars. The remnants of the Song retreated to southern China.[73]

The Mongol conquest of China began in 1205 with the gradual conquest of Western Xia by Genghis Khan,[74] who also invaded Jin territories.[75] In 1271, the Mongol leader Kublai Khan established the Yuan dynasty, which conquered the last remnant of the Song dynasty in 1279. Before the Mongol invasion, the population of Song China was 120 million citizens; this was reduced to 60 million by the time of the census in 1300.[76] A peasant named Zhu Yuanzhang led a rebellion that overthrew the Yuan in 1368 and founded the Ming dynasty as the Hongwu Emperor. Under the Ming dynasty, China enjoyed another golden age, developing one of the strongest navies in the world and a rich and prosperous economy amid a flourishing of art and culture. It was during this period that admiral Zheng He led the Ming treasure voyages throughout the Indian Ocean, reaching as far as East Africa.[77]

 
The Qing conquest of the Ming and expansion of the empire

In the early years of the Ming dynasty, China's capital was moved from Nanjing to Beijing. With the budding of capitalism, philosophers such as Wang Yangming further critiqued and expanded Neo-Confucianism with concepts of individualism and equality of four occupations.[78] The scholar-official stratum became a supporting force of industry and commerce in the tax boycott movements, which, together with the famines and defense against Japanese invasions of Korea (1592–1598) and Manchu invasions led to an exhausted treasury.[79] In 1644, Beijing was captured by a coalition of peasant rebel forces led by Li Zicheng. The Chongzhen Emperor committed suicide when the city fell. The Manchu Qing dynasty, then allied with Ming dynasty general Wu Sangui, overthrew Li's short-lived Shun dynasty and subsequently seized control of Beijing, which became the new capital of the Qing dynasty.[80]

The Qing dynasty, which lasted from 1644 until 1912, was the last imperial dynasty of China. Its conquest of the Ming (1618–1683) cost 25 million lives and the economy of China shrank drastically.[81] After the Southern Ming ended, the further conquest of the Dzungar Khanate added Mongolia, Tibet and Xinjiang to the empire.[82] The centralized autocracy was strengthened to suppress anti-Qing sentiment with the policy of valuing agriculture and restraining commerce, the Haijin ("sea ban"), and ideological control as represented by the literary inquisition, causing social and technological stagnation.[83][84]

Fall of the Qing dynasty

 
The Eight-Nation Alliance invaded China to defeat the anti-foreign Boxers and their Qing backers. The image shows a celebration ceremony inside the Chinese imperial palace, the Forbidden City after the signing of the Boxer Protocol in 1901.

In the mid-19th century, the Qing dynasty experienced Western imperialism in the Opium Wars with Britain and France. China was forced to pay compensation, open treaty ports, allow extraterritoriality for foreign nationals, and cede Hong Kong to the British[85] under the 1842 Treaty of Nanking, the first of the Unequal Treaties. The First Sino-Japanese War (1894–1895) resulted in Qing China's loss of influence in the Korean Peninsula, as well as the cession of Taiwan to Japan.[86] The Qing dynasty also began experiencing internal unrest in which tens of millions of people died, especially in the White Lotus Rebellion, the failed Taiping Rebellion that ravaged southern China in the 1850s and 1860s and the Dungan Revolt (1862–1877) in the northwest. The initial success of the Self-Strengthening Movement of the 1860s was frustrated by a series of military defeats in the 1880s and 1890s.[citation needed]

In the 19th century, the great Chinese diaspora began. Losses due to emigration were added to by conflicts and catastrophes such as the Northern Chinese Famine of 1876–1879, in which between 9 and 13 million people died.[87] The Guangxu Emperor drafted a reform plan in 1898 to establish a modern constitutional monarchy, but these plans were thwarted by the Empress Dowager Cixi. The ill-fated anti-foreign Boxer Rebellion of 1899–1901 further weakened the dynasty. Although Cixi sponsored a program of reforms, the Xinhai Revolution of 1911–1912 brought an end to the Qing dynasty and established the Republic of China.[88] Puyi, the last Emperor of China, abdicated in 1912.[89]

Establishment of the Republic and World War II

 
Sun Yat-sen, the founding father of Republic of China, one of the first republics in Asia.

On 1 January 1912, the Republic of China was established, and Sun Yat-sen of the Kuomintang (the KMT or Nationalist Party) was proclaimed provisional president.[90] On 12 February 1912, regent Empress Dowager Longyu sealed the imperial abdication decree on behalf of 4 year old Puyi, the last emperor of China, ending 5,000 years of monarchy in China.[91] In March 1912, the presidency was given to Yuan Shikai, a former Qing general who in 1915 proclaimed himself Emperor of China. In the face of popular condemnation and opposition from his own Beiyang Army, he was forced to abdicate and re-establish the republic in 1916.[92]

After Yuan Shikai's death in 1916, China was politically fragmented. Its Beijing-based government was internationally recognized but virtually powerless; regional warlords controlled most of its territory.[93][94] In the late 1920s, the Kuomintang under Chiang Kai-shek, the then Principal of the Republic of China Military Academy, was able to reunify the country under its own control with a series of deft military and political maneuverings, known collectively as the Northern Expedition.[95][96] The Kuomintang moved the nation's capital to Nanjing and implemented "political tutelage", an intermediate stage of political development outlined in Sun Yat-sen's San-min program for transforming China into a modern democratic state.[97][98] The political division in China made it difficult for Chiang to battle the communist-led People's Liberation Army (PLA), against whom the Kuomintang had been warring since 1927 in the Chinese Civil War. This war continued successfully for the Kuomintang, especially after the PLA retreated in the Long March, until Japanese aggression and the 1936 Xi'an Incident forced Chiang to confront Imperial Japan.[99]

 
Chiang Kai-shek and Mao Zedong toasting together in 1945 following the end of World War II

The Second Sino-Japanese War (1937–1945), a theater of World War II, forced an uneasy alliance between the Kuomintang and the Communists. Japanese forces committed numerous war atrocities against the civilian population; in all, as many as 20 million Chinese civilians died.[100] An estimated 40,000 to 300,000 Chinese were massacred in the city of Nanjing alone during the Japanese occupation.[101] During the war, China, along with the UK, the United States, and the Soviet Union, were referred to as "trusteeship of the powerful"[102] and were recognized as the Allied "Big Four" in the Declaration by United Nations.[103][104] Along with the other three great powers, China was one of the four major Allies of World War II, and was later considered one of the primary victors in the war.[105][106] After the surrender of Japan in 1945, Taiwan, including the Pescadores, was handed over to Chinese control. However, the validity of this handover is controversial, in that whether Taiwan's sovereignty was legally transferred and whether China is a legitimate recipient, due to complex issues that arose from the handling of Japan's surrender, resulting in the unresolved political status of Taiwan, which is a flashpoint of potential war between China and Taiwan. China emerged victorious but war-ravaged and financially drained. The continued distrust between the Kuomintang and the Communists led to the resumption of civil war. Constitutional rule was established in 1947, but because of the ongoing unrest, many provisions of the ROC constitution were never implemented in mainland China.[107]

Civil War and the People's Republic

Before the existence of the People's Republic, the CCP had declared several areas of the country as the Chinese Soviet Republic (Jiangxi Soviet), a predecessor state to the PRC, in November 1931 in Ruijin, Jiangxi. The Jiangxi Soviet was wiped out by the KMT armies in 1934 and was relocated to Yan'an in Shaanxi where the Long March concluded in 1935.[108][failed verification] It would be the base of the communists before major combat in the Chinese Civil War ended in 1949. Afterwards, the CCP took control of most of mainland China, and the Kuomintang retreating offshore to Taiwan, reducing its territory to only Taiwan, Hainan, and their surrounding islands.

On 1 October 1949, CCP Chairman Mao Zedong formally proclaimed the establishment of the People's Republic of China at the new nation's founding ceremony and inaugural military parade in Tiananmen Square, Beijing.[109][110] In 1950, the People's Liberation Army captured Hainan from the ROC[111] and annexed Tibet.[112] However, remaining Kuomintang forces continued to wage an insurgency in western China throughout the 1950s.[113]

The government consolidated its popularity among the peasants through land reform, which included the execution of between 1 and 2 million landlords.[114] China developed an independent industrial system and its own nuclear weapons.[115] The Chinese population increased from 550 million in 1950 to 900 million in 1974.[116] However, the Great Leap Forward, an idealistic massive reform project, resulted in an estimated 15 to 55 million deaths between 1959 and 1961, mostly from starvation.[117][118] In 1966, Mao and his allies launched the Cultural Revolution, sparking a decade of political recrimination and social upheaval that lasted until Mao's death in 1976. In October 1971, the PRC replaced the Republic of China in the United Nations, and took its seat as a permanent member of the Security Council.[119] This UN action also created the problem of the political status of Taiwan and the Two Chinas issue. See Cross-Strait relations and "Taiwan, China".

Reforms and contemporary history

 
The 1989 Tiananmen Square protests was ended by a military-led massacre which brought condemnations and sanctions against the Chinese government from various foreign countries.

After Mao's death, the Gang of Four was quickly arrested by Hua Guofeng and held responsible for the excesses of the Cultural Revolution. Deng Xiaoping took power in 1978, and instituted significant economic reforms. The CCP loosened governmental control over citizens' personal lives, and the communes were gradually disbanded in favor of working contracted to households. Agricultural collectivization was dismantled and farmlands privatized, while foreign trade became a major new focus, leading to the creation of Special Economic Zones (SEZs). Inefficient state-owned enterprises (SOEs) were restructured and unprofitable ones were closed outright, resulting in massive job losses.[citation needed] This marked China's transition from a planned economy to a mixed economy with an increasingly open-market environment.[120] China adopted its current constitution on 4 December 1982. In 1989, the suppression of student protests in Tiananmen Square brought condemnations and sanctions against the Chinese government from various foreign countries.[121]

Jiang Zemin, Li Peng and Zhu Rongji led the nation in the 1990s. Under their administration, China's economic performance pulled an estimated[by whom?] 150 million peasants out of poverty and sustained an average annual gross domestic product growth rate of 11.2%.[122][better source needed] British Hong Kong and Portuguese Macau returned to China in 1997 and 1999, respectively, as the Hong Kong and Macau special administrative regions under the principle of One country, two systems. The country joined the World Trade Organization in 2001, and maintained its high rate of economic growth under Hu Jintao and Wen Jiabao's leadership in the 2000s. However, the growth also severely impacted the country's resources and environment,[123][124] and caused major social displacement.[125][126]

CCP general secretary Xi Jinping has ruled since 2012 and has pursued large-scale efforts to reform China's economy[127][128] (which has suffered from structural instabilities and slowing growth),[129][130][131] and has also reformed the one-child policy and penal system,[132] as well as instituting a vast anti-corruption crackdown.[133] In the early 2010s, China's economic growth rate began to slow amid domestic credit troubles, weakening international demand for Chinese exports and fragility in the global economy.[134][135][136] In 2013, China initiated the Belt and Road Initiative, a global infrastructure investment project.[137] Since 2017, the Chinese government has been engaged in a harsh crackdown in Xinjiang, with an estimated one million people, mostly Uyghurs but including other ethnic and religious minorities, in internment camps.[138] The National People's Congress in 2018 altered the country's constitution to remove the two-term limit on holding the Presidency of China, permitting the current leader, Xi Jinping, to remain president of China (and general secretary of the CCP) for an unlimited time, earning criticism for creating dictatorial governance.[139][140] In 2020, the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress (NPCSC) passed a national security law in Hong Kong that gave the Hong Kong government wide-ranging tools to crack down on dissent.[141]

The global COVID-19 pandemic originated in Wuhan and was first identified from an outbreak in December 2019.[142] The Chinese government response has included a zero-COVID strategy, making it one of few countries to pursue this approach.[143] China was the only major economy in the world to grow in 2020, recording a 2.3% growth due to its success in containing the coronavirus within its borders.[144] The country's economy continued to broaden recovery from the recession during the pandemic, with stable job creation and record international trade growth, although retail consumption was still slower than predicted.[145][146] These Zero-COVID strategies have led to a variety of protests across China against them starting in November 2022.

Geography

 
China topographic map with East Asia countries

China's landscape is vast and diverse, ranging from the Gobi and Taklamakan Deserts in the arid north to the subtropical forests in the wetter south. The Himalaya, Karakoram, Pamir and Tian Shan mountain ranges separate China from much of South and Central Asia. The Yangtze and Yellow Rivers, the third- and sixth-longest in the world, respectively, run from the Tibetan Plateau to the densely populated eastern seaboard. China's coastline along the Pacific Ocean is 14,500 km (9,000 mi) long and is bounded by the Bohai, Yellow, East China and South China seas. China connects through the Kazakh border to the Eurasian Steppe which has been an artery of communication between East and West since the Neolithic through the Steppe Route – the ancestor of the terrestrial Silk Road(s).[citation needed]

The territory of China lies between latitudes 18° and 54° N, and longitudes 73° and 135° E. The geographical center of China is marked by the Center of the Country Monument at 35°50′40.9″N 103°27′7.5″E / 35.844694°N 103.452083°E / 35.844694; 103.452083 (Geographical center of China). China's landscapes vary significantly across its vast territory. In the east, along the shores of the Yellow Sea and the East China Sea, there are extensive and densely populated alluvial plains, while on the edges of the Inner Mongolian plateau in the north, broad grasslands predominate. Southern China is dominated by hills and low mountain ranges, while the central-east hosts the deltas of China's two major rivers, the Yellow River and the Yangtze River. Other major rivers include the Xi, Mekong, Brahmaputra and Amur. To the west sit major mountain ranges, most notably the Himalayas. High plateaus feature among the more arid landscapes of the north, such as the Taklamakan and the Gobi Desert. The world's highest point, Mount Everest (8,848 m), lies on the Sino-Nepalese border.[147] The country's lowest point, and the world's third-lowest, is the dried lake bed of Ayding Lake (−154 m) in the Turpan Depression.[148]

Climate

China's climate is mainly dominated by dry seasons and wet monsoons, which lead to pronounced temperature differences between winter and summer. In the winter, northern winds coming from high-latitude areas are cold and dry; in summer, southern winds from coastal areas at lower latitudes are warm and moist.[150]

A major environmental issue in China is the continued expansion of its deserts, particularly the Gobi Desert.[151][152] Although barrier tree lines planted since the 1970s have reduced the frequency of sandstorms, prolonged drought and poor agricultural practices have resulted in dust storms plaguing northern China each spring, which then spread to other parts of East Asia, including Japan and Korea. China's environmental watchdog, SEPA, stated in 2007 that China is losing 4,000 km2 (1,500 sq mi) per year to desertification.[153] Water quality, erosion, and pollution control have become important issues in China's relations with other countries. Melting glaciers in the Himalayas could potentially lead to water shortages for hundreds of millions of people.[154] According to academics, in order to limit climate change in China to 1.5 °C (2.7 °F) electricity generation from coal in China without carbon capture must be phased out by 2045.[155] Official government statistics about Chinese agricultural productivity are considered unreliable, due to exaggeration of production at subsidiary government levels.[156][157] Much of China has a climate very suitable for agriculture and the country has been the world's largest producer of rice, wheat, tomatoes, eggplant, grapes, watermelon, spinach, and many other crops.[158]

Biodiversity

China is one of 17 megadiverse countries,[159] lying in two of the world's major biogeographic realms: the Palearctic and the Indomalayan. By one measure, China has over 34,687 species of animals and vascular plants, making it the third-most biodiverse country in the world, after Brazil and Colombia.[160] The country signed the Rio de Janeiro Convention on Biological Diversity on 11 June 1992, and became a party to the convention on 5 January 1993.[161] It later produced a National Biodiversity Strategy and Action Plan, with one revision that was received by the convention on 21 September 2010.[162]

China is home to at least 551 species of mammals (the third-highest such number in the world),[163] 1,221 species of birds (eighth),[164] 424 species of reptiles (seventh)[165] and 333 species of amphibians (seventh).[166] Wildlife in China shares habitat with, and bears acute pressure from, the world's largest population of humans. At least 840 animal species are threatened, vulnerable or in danger of local extinction in China, due mainly to human activity such as habitat destruction, pollution and poaching for food, fur and ingredients for traditional Chinese medicine.[167] Endangered wildlife is protected by law, and as of 2005, the country has over 2,349 nature reserves, covering a total area of 149.95 million hectares, 15 percent of China's total land area.[168][better source needed] Most wild animals have been eliminated from the core agricultural regions of east and central China, but they have fared better in the mountainous south and west.[169][170] The Baiji was confirmed extinct on 12 December 2006.[171]

China has over 32,000 species of vascular plants,[172] and is home to a variety of forest types. Cold coniferous forests predominate in the north of the country, supporting animal species such as moose and Asian black bear, along with over 120 bird species.[173] The understory of moist conifer forests may contain thickets of bamboo. In higher montane stands of juniper and yew, the bamboo is replaced by rhododendrons. Subtropical forests, which are predominate in central and southern China, support a high density of plant species including numerous rare endemics. Tropical and seasonal rainforests, though confined to Yunnan and Hainan Island, contain a quarter of all the animal and plant species found in China.[173] China has over 10,000 recorded species of fungi,[174] and of them, nearly 6,000 are higher fungi.[175]

Environment

 
The Three Gorges Dam is the largest hydroelectric dam in the world.

In the early 2000s, China has suffered from environmental deterioration and pollution due to its rapid pace of industrialization.[176][177] While regulations such as the 1979 Environmental Protection Law are fairly stringent, they are poorly enforced, as they are frequently disregarded by local communities and government officials in favor of rapid economic development.[178] China is the country with the second highest death toll because of air pollution, after India. There are approximately 1 million deaths caused by exposure to ambient air pollution.[179][180] Although China ranks as the highest CO2 emitting country in the world,[181] it only emits 8 tons of CO2 per capita, significantly lower than developed countries such as the United States (16.1), Australia (16.8) and South Korea (13.6).[182]

In recent years, China has clamped down on pollution. In March 2014, CCP General Secretary Xi Jinping "declared war" on pollution during the opening of the National People's Congress.[183] After extensive debate lasting nearly two years, the parliament approved a new environmental law in April. The new law empowers environmental enforcement agencies with great punitive power and large fines for offenders, defines areas which require extra protection, and gives independent environmental groups more ability to operate in the country.[citation needed] In 2020, Chinese Communist Party general secretary Xi Jinping announced that China aims to peak emissions before 2030 and go carbon-neutral by 2060 in accordance with the Paris climate accord.[184] According to Climate Action Tracker, if accomplished it would lower the expected rise in global temperature by 0.2 – 0.3 degrees – "the biggest single reduction ever estimated by the Climate Action Tracker".[185] In September 2021 Xi Jinping announced that China will not build "coal-fired power projects abroad". The decision can be "pivotal" in reducing emissions. The Belt and Road Initiative did not include financing such projects already in the first half of 2021.[186]

The country also had significant water pollution problems: 8.2% of China's rivers had been polluted by industrial and agricultural waste in 2019.[187][188] China had a 2018 Forest Landscape Integrity Index mean score of 7.14/10, ranking it 53rd globally out of 172 countries.[189] In 2020, a sweeping law was passed by the Chinese government to protect the ecology of the Yangtze River. The new laws include strengthening ecological protection rules for hydropower projects along the river, banning chemical plants within 1 kilometer of the river, relocating polluting industries, severely restricting sand mining as well as a complete fishing ban on all the natural waterways of the river, including all its major tributaries and lakes.[190]

China is also the world's leading investor in renewable energy and its commercialization, with $52 billion invested in 2011 alone;[191][192][193] it is a major manufacturer of renewable energy technologies and invests heavily in local-scale renewable energy projects.[194][195][196] By 2015, over 24% of China's energy was derived from renewable sources, while most notably from hydroelectric power: a total installed capacity of 197 GW makes China the largest hydroelectric power producer in the world.[197][198] China also has the largest power capacity of installed solar photovoltaics system and wind power system in the world.[199][200] Greenhouse gas emissions by China are the world's largest,[182] as is renewable energy in China.[201] Despite its emphasis on renewables, China remains deeply connected to global oil markets and next to India, has been the largest importer of Russian crude oil in 2022.[202][203]

Political geography

 
Map showing the territorial claims of the PRC.

The People's Republic of China is the second-largest country in the world by land area after Russia.[w][x] China's total area is generally stated as being approximately 9,600,000 km2 (3,700,000 sq mi).[204] Specific area figures range from 9,572,900 km2 (3,696,100 sq mi) according to the Encyclopædia Britannica,[205] to 9,596,961 km2 (3,705,407 sq mi) according to the UN Demographic Yearbook,[3] and the CIA World Factbook.[6]

China has the longest combined land border in the world, measuring 22,117 km (13,743 mi) and its coastline covers approximately 14,500 km (9,000 mi) from the mouth of the Yalu River (Amnok River) to the Gulf of Tonkin.[6] China borders 14 nations and covers the bulk of East Asia, bordering Vietnam, Laos, and Myanmar in Southeast Asia; India, Bhutan, Nepal, Afghanistan, and Pakistan[y] in South Asia; Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan in Central Asia; and Russia, Mongolia, and North Korea in Inner Asia and Northeast Asia. It is narrowly separated from Bangladesh and Thailand to the southwest and south, and has several maritime neighbors such as Japan, Philippines, Malaysia, and Indonesia.[206]

Politics

The Chinese constitution states that the People's Republic of China "is a socialist state governed by a people's democratic dictatorship that is led by the working class and based on an alliance of workers and peasants," and that the state institutions "shall practice the principle of democratic centralism."[207] The PRC is one of the world's only socialist states governed by a communist party. The Chinese government has been variously described as communist and socialist, but also as authoritarian[208] and corporatist,[209] with amongst the heaviest restrictions worldwide in many areas, most notably against free access to the Internet, freedom of the press, freedom of assembly, the right to have children, free formation of social organizations and freedom of religion.[210]

Although the Chinese Communist Party describes China as a "socialist consultative democracy",[211] the country is commonly described as an authoritarian one-party surveillance state and a dictatorship.[212][213] China has consistently been ranked amongst the lowest as an "authoritarian regime" by the Economist Intelligence Unit's Democracy Index, ranking at 148th out of 167 countries in 2021.[214] Its current political, ideological and economic system has been termed by its leaders as a "whole-process people's democracy" "people's democratic dictatorship", "socialism with Chinese characteristics" (which is Marxism adapted to Chinese circumstances) and the "socialist market economy" respectively.[215][216]

Political concerns in China include the growing gap between rich and poor and government corruption.[217] Nonetheless, the level of public support for the government and its management of the nation is high, with 80–95% of Chinese citizens expressing satisfaction with the central government, according to a 2011 Harvard University survey.[218] A 2020 survey from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research also had most Chinese expressing satisfaction with the government on information dissemination and delivery of daily necessities during the COVID-19 pandemic.[219][220] A Harvard University survey published in July 2020 found that citizen satisfaction with the government had increased since 2003, also rating China's government as more effective and capable than ever before in the survey's history.[221]

Chinese Communist Party

 
The Chinese Communist Party is the founding and ruling political party of the People's Republic of China.

The main body of the Chinese constitution declares that "the defining feature of socialism with Chinese characteristics is the leadership of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP)."[222] China is a one-party Marxist–Leninist state,[223] wherein the CCP general secretary (party leader) holds ultimate power and authority over state and government and serves as the informal paramount leader.[224] The current general secretary is Xi Jinping, who took office on 15 November 2012, and was re-elected on 25 October 2017.[225] According to the CCP constitution, its highest body is the National Congress held every five years.[226] The National Congress elects the Central Committee, who then elects the party's Politburo, Politburo Standing Committee and general secretary, the top leadership of the country.[226] At the local level, the secretary of the CCP committee of a subdivision outranks the local government level; CCP committee secretary of a provincial division outranks the governor while the CCP committee secretary of a city outranks the mayor.[227]

Since both the CCP and the People's Liberation Army (PLA) promote according to seniority, it is possible to discern distinct generations of Chinese leadership.[228] In official discourse, each group of leadership is identified with a distinct extension of the ideology of the party. Historians have studied various periods in the development of the government of the People's Republic of China by reference to these "generations".

Generations of Chinese leadership
Generation Paramount Leader Start End Ideology
First Mao Zedong
Hua Guofeng
1949 1978 Mao Zedong Thought
Second Deng Xiaoping 1978 1989 Deng Xiaoping Theory
Third Jiang Zemin 1989 2002 Three Represents
Fourth Hu Jintao 2002 2012 Scientific Outlook on Development
Fifth Xi Jinping 2012 Xi Jinping Thought

Government

The nearly 3,000 member National People's Congress (NPC) is constitutionally the "highest state organ of power",[207] though it has been also described as a "rubber stamp" body.[229] The NPC meets annually, while the NPC Standing Committee, around 150 member body elected from NPC delegates, meets every couple of months.[229] In what China calls the "people's congress system", local people's congresses at the lowest level[z] are officially directly elected, with all the higher-level people's congresses up to the NPC being elected by the level one below.[207] However, the elections are not pluralistic, with nominations at all levels being controlled by the CCP.[230] The NPC is dominated by the CCP, with another eight minor parties having nominal representation in the condition of upholding CCP leadership.[231]

The president is the ceremonial head of state, elected by the NPC. The incumbent president is Xi Jinping, who is also the general secretary of the CCP and the chairman of the Central Military Commission, making him China's paramount leader. The premier is the head of government, with Li Keqiang being the incumbent premier. The premier is officially nominated by the president and then elected by the NPC, and has generally been either the second or third-ranking member of the PSC. The premier presides over the State Council, China's cabinet, composed of four vice premiers and the heads of ministries and commissions.[207] The Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC) is a political advisory body that is critical in China's "united front" system, which aims to gather non-CCP voices to support the CCP. Similar to the people's congresses, CPPCC's exist at various division, with the National Committee of the CPPCC being chaired by Wang Yang, one of China's top leaders.[232]

Administrative divisions

The People's Republic of China is constitutionally a unitary state officially divided into 23 provinces,[n] five autonomous regions (each with a designated minority group), and four municipalities—collectively referred to as "mainland China"—as well as the special administrative regions (SARs) of Hong Kong and Macau.[233] The PRC considers Taiwan to be its 23rd province,[234] although it is governed by the Republic of China (ROC), which claims to be the legitimate representative of China and its territory, though it has downplayed this claim since its democratization.[235] Geographically, all 31 provincial divisions of mainland China can be grouped into six regions: North China, Northeast China, East China, South Central China, Southwest China, and Northwest China.[236]

Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous RegionTibet (Xizang) Autonomous RegionQinghai ProvinceGansu ProvinceSichuan ProvinceYunnan ProvinceNingxia Hui Autonomous RegionInner Mongolia (Nei Mongol) Autonomous RegionShaanxi ProvinceMunicipality of ChongqingGuizhou ProvinceGuangxi Zhuang Autonomous RegionShanxi ProvinceHenan ProvinceHubei ProvinceHunan ProvinceGuangdong ProvinceHainan ProvinceHebei ProvinceHeilongjiang ProvinceJilin ProvinceLiaoning ProvinceMunicipality of BeijingMunicipality of TianjinShandong ProvinceJiangsu ProvinceAnhui ProvinceMunicipality of ShanghaiZhejiang ProvinceJiangxi ProvinceFujian ProvinceHong Kong Special Administrative RegionMacau Special Administrative RegionTaiwan Province 
Provinces () Claimed Province
Autonomous regions (自治区) Municipalities (直辖市) Special administrative regions (特别行政区)
  • Hong Kong / Xianggang (香港特别行政区)
  • Macau / Aomen (澳门特别行政区)

Foreign relations

 
Diplomatic relations of China

The PRC has diplomatic relations with 175 countries and maintains embassies in 162. In 2019, China had the largest diplomatic network in the world.[237][238] Its legitimacy is disputed by the Republic of China and a few other countries; it is thus the largest and most populous state with limited recognition, with a population of more than 1.4 billion.[239] In 1971, the PRC replaced the Republic of China as the sole representative of China in the United Nations and as one of the five permanent members of the United Nations Security Council.[240] China was also a former member and leader of the Non-Aligned Movement, and still considers itself an advocate for developing countries.[241] Along with Brazil, Russia, India and South Africa, China is a member of the BRICS group of emerging major economies and hosted the group's third official summit at Sanya, Hainan in April 2011.[242]

Under the One-China principle, Beijing has made it a precondition to establishing diplomatic relations that the other country acknowledges its claim to Taiwan and severs official ties with the government of the Republic of China.[citation needed] Chinese officials have protested on numerous occasions when foreign countries have made diplomatic overtures to Taiwan,[243] especially in the matter of armament sales.[244]

Much of current Chinese foreign policy is reportedly based on Premier Zhou Enlai's Five Principles of Peaceful Coexistence, and is also driven by the concept of "harmony without uniformity", which encourages diplomatic relations between states despite ideological differences.[245] This policy may have led China to support states that are regarded as dangerous or repressive by Western nations, such as Zimbabwe, North Korea and Iran.[246] China has a close economic and military relationship with Russia,[247] and the two states often vote in unison in the United Nations Security Council.[248][249][250]

Trade relations

 
On 21 May 2014, China and Russia signed a $400 billion gas deal. Currently, Russia is supplying natural gas to China.

China became the world's largest trading nation in 2013 as measured by the sum of imports and exports, as well as the world's largest commodity importer. comprising roughly 45% of maritime's dry-bulk market.[251][252] By 2016, China was the largest trading partner of 124 other countries.[253] China is the largest trading partner for the ASEAN nations, with a total trade value of $345.8 billion in 2015 accounting for 15.2% of ASEAN's total trade.[254] ASEAN is also China's largest trading partner.[255] In 2020, China became the largest trading partner of the European Union for goods, with the total value of goods trade reaching nearly $700 billion.[256] China, along with ASEAN, Japan, South Korea, Australia and New Zealand, is a member of the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership, the world's largest free-trade area covering 30% of the world's population and economic output.[257] China became a member of the World Trade Organization (WTO) in 2001. In 2004, it proposed an entirely new East Asia Summit (EAS) framework as a forum for regional security issues.[258] The EAS, which includes ASEAN Plus Three, India, Australia and New Zealand, held its inaugural summit in 2005.[259]

China has had a long and complex trade relationship with the United States. In 2000, the United States Congress approved "permanent normal trade relations" (PNTR) with China, allowing Chinese exports in at the same low tariffs as goods from most other countries.[260] China has a significant trade surplus with the United States, its most important export market.[261] Economists have argued that the renminbi is undervalued, due to currency intervention from the Chinese government, giving China an unfair trade advantage.[262] In August 2019, the United States Department of the Treasury designated China as a "currency manipulator",[263] later reversing the decision in January 2020.[264] The US and other foreign governments have also alleged that China doesn't respect intellectual property (IP) rights and steals IP through espionage operations,[265][266] with the US Department of Justice saying that 80% of all the prosecutions related to economic espionage it brings were about conduct to benefit the Chinese state.[267]

Since the turn of the century, China has followed a policy of engaging with African nations for trade and bilateral co-operation;[268][269][270] in 2019, Sino-African trade totalled $208 billion, having grown 20 times over two decades.[271] According to Madison Condon "China finances more infrastructure projects in Africa than the World Bank and provides billions of dollars in low-interest loans to the continent's emerging economies."[272] China maintains extensive and highly diversified trade links with the European Union.[256] China has furthermore strengthened its trade ties with major South American economies,[273] and is the largest trading partner of Brazil, Chile, Peru, Uruguay, Argentina, and several others.[274]

China's Belt and Road Initiative has expanded significantly over the last six years and, as of April 2020, includes 138 countries and 30 international organizations. In addition to intensifying foreign policy relations, the focus here is particularly on building efficient transport routes. The focus is particularly on the maritime Silk Road with its connections to East Africa and Europe and there are Chinese investments or related declarations of intent at numerous ports such as Gwadar, Kuantan, Hambantota, Piraeus and Trieste. However many of these loans made under the Belt and Road program are unsustainable and China has faced a number of calls for debt relief from debtor nations.[275][276]

Territorial disputes

Taiwan
 
Map depicting territorial disputes between the PRC and neighboring states. For a larger map, see here.

Ever since its establishment after the Chinese Civil War, the PRC has claimed the territories governed by the Republic of China (ROC), a separate political entity today commonly known as Taiwan, as a part of its territory. It regards the island of Taiwan as its Taiwan Province, Kinmen and Matsu as a part of Fujian Province and islands the ROC controls in the South China Sea as a part of Hainan Province and Guangdong Province. These claims are controversial because of the complicated Cross-Strait relations, with the PRC treating the One-China Principle as one of its most important diplomatic principles.[277][better source needed]

Land border disputes

China has resolved its land borders with 12 out of 14 neighboring countries, having pursued substantial compromises in most of them.[278][279][280] As of 2023, China currently has a disputed land border with India and Bhutan.[citation needed]

Maritime border disputes

China is additionally involved in maritime disputes with multiple countries over the ownership of several small islands in the East and South China Seas, such as Socotra Rock, the Senkaku Islands and the entirety of South China Sea Islands,[281][282] along with the EEZ disputes over East China Sea.

Sociopolitical issues and human rights

 
March in memory of Chinese Nobel Peace Prize laureate Liu Xiaobo who died of organ failure while in government custody in 2017

China uses a massive espionage network of cameras, facial recognition software, sensors, and surveillance of personal technology as a means of social control of persons living in the country.[283] The Chinese democracy movement, social activists, and some members of the CCP[who?] believe in the need for social and political reform. While economic and social controls have been significantly relaxed in China since the 1970s, political freedom is still tightly restricted. The Constitution of the People's Republic of China states that the "fundamental rights" of citizens include freedom of speech, freedom of the press, the right to a fair trial, freedom of religion, universal suffrage, and property rights. However, in practice, these provisions do not afford significant protection against criminal prosecution by the state.[284][285] Although some criticisms of government policies and the ruling CCP are tolerated, censorship of political speech and information, most notably on the Internet,[286][287] are routinely used to prevent collective action.[288]

A number of foreign governments, foreign press agencies, and non-governmental organizations have criticized China's human rights record, alleging widespread civil rights violations such as detention without trial, forced abortions,[289] forced confessions, torture, restrictions of fundamental rights,[210][290] and excessive use of the death penalty.[291][292] The government suppresses popular protests and demonstrations that it considers a potential threat to "social stability", as was the case with the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests and massacre.[293]

 
In Xinjiang, China has been accused of committing genocide against Uyghurs and detaining more than one million Uyghurs and other ethnic minorities in camps.[294]

China is regularly accused of large-scale repression and human rights abuses in Tibet and Xinjiang,[295][296][297] including violent police crackdowns and religious suppression.[298][299] In Xinjiang, at least one million Uyghurs and other ethnic and religion minorities have been detained in internment camps, officially termed "Vocational Education and Training Centers", aimed at changing the political thinking of detainees, their identities, and their religious beliefs.[138] According to the U.S. Department of State, actions including political indoctrination, torture, physical and psychological abuse, forced sterilization, sexual abuse, and forced labor are common in these facilities.[300] The state has also sought to control offshore reporting of tensions in Xinjiang, intimidating foreign-based reporters by detaining their family members.[301] According to a 2020 report, China's treatment of Uyghurs meets the UN definition of genocide,[302] and several groups called for a UN investigation.[303] Several countries have recognized China's actions in Xinjiang as a genocide.[304][294][305]

Global studies from Pew Research Center in 2014 and 2017 ranked the Chinese government's restrictions on religion as among the highest in the world, despite low to moderate rankings for religious-related social hostilities in the country.[306][307] The Global Slavery Index estimated that in 2016 more than 3.8 million people were living in "conditions of modern slavery", or 0.25% of the population, including victims of human trafficking, forced labor, forced marriage, child labor, and state-imposed forced labor. The state-imposed forced system was formally abolished in 2013, but it is not clear to which extent its various practices have stopped.[308] The Chinese penal system includes labor prison factories, detention centers, and re-education camps, collectively known as laogai ("reform through labor"). The Laogai Research Foundation in the United States estimated that there were over a thousand slave labor prisons and camps in China.[309]

In 2019, a study called for the mass retraction of more than 400 scientific papers on organ transplantation, because of fears the organs were obtained unethically from Chinese prisoners. While the government says 10,000 transplants occur each year, a report by the Falun Gong-linked IETAC alleged that between 60,000 and 100,000 organs are transplanted each year and claimed that this gap was being made up by executed prisoners of conscience.[310]

Military

 

The People's Liberation Army (PLA) is considered one of the world's most powerful militaries and has rapidly modernized in the recent decades.[311] It consists of the Ground Force (PLAGF), the Navy (PLAN), the Air Force (PLAAF), the Rocket Force (PLARF) and the Strategic Support Force (PLASSF). Its nearly 2.2 million active duty personnel is the largest in the world. The PLA holds the world's third-largest stockpile of nuclear weapons,[312][313] and the world's second-largest navy by tonnage.[314] China's official military budget for 2022 totalled US$230 billion (1.45 trillion Yuan), the second-largest in the world. According to SIPRI estimates, its military spending from 2012 to 2021 averaged US$215 billion per year or 1.7 per cent of GDP, behind only the United States at US$734 billion per year or 3.6 per cent of GDP.[315] The PLA is commanded by the Central Military Commission (CMC) of the party and the state; though officially two separate organizations, the two CMCs have identical membership except during leadership transition periods and effectively function as one organization. The chairman of the CMC is the commander-in-chief of the PLA, with the officeholder also generally being the CCP general secretary, making them the paramount leader of China.[316]

Economy

 
China and other major developing economies by GDP per capita at purchasing-power parity, 1990–2013. The rapid economic growth of China (blue) is readily apparent.[317]
 
A proportional representation of Chinese exports, 2019

China has the world's second-largest economy in terms of nominal GDP,[318] and the world's largest economy in terms of purchasing power parity (PPP).[319] As of 2021, China accounts for around 18% of the world economy by GDP nominal.[320] China is one of the world's fastest-growing major economies,[321] with its economic growth having been consistently above 6% since the introduction of economic reforms in 1978.[322] According to the World Bank, China's GDP grew from $150 billion in 1978 to $17.73 trillion by 2021.[323] Of the world's 500 largest companies, 145 are headquartered in China.[324]

China had one of the largest economies in the world for most of the past two thousand years,[325] during which it has seen cycles of prosperity and decline.[326][327] Since economic reforms began in 1978, China has developed into a highly diversified economy and one of the most consequential players in international trade. Major sectors of competitive strength include manufacturing, retail, mining, steel, textiles, automobiles, energy generation, green energy, banking, electronics, telecommunications, real estate, e-commerce, and tourism. China has three out of the ten largest stock exchanges in the world[328]Shanghai, Hong Kong and Shenzhen—that together have a market capitalization of over $15.9 trillion, as of October 2020.[329] China has four (Shanghai, Hong Kong, Beijing, and Shenzhen) out of the world's top ten most competitive financial centers, which is more than any country in the 2020 Global Financial Centres Index.[330] By 2035, China's four cities (Shanghai, Beijing, Guangzhou and Shenzhen) are projected to be among the global top ten largest cities by nominal GDP according to a report by Oxford Economics.[331]

Modern-day China is considered an example of state capitalism or party-state capitalism.[332][333] The state dominates in strategic "pillar" sectors such as energy production and heavy industries, but private enterprise has expanded enormously, with around 30 million private businesses recorded in 2008.[334][335][336] In 2018, private enterprises in China accounted for 60% of GDP, 80% of urban employment and 90% of new jobs.[337][better source needed]

China has been the world's No. 1 manufacturer since 2010, after overtaking the US, which had been No. 1 for the previous hundred years.[338][339] China has also been No. 2 in high-tech manufacturing since 2012, according to US National Science Foundation.[340] China is the second largest retail market in the world, next to the United States.[341] China leads the world in e-commerce, accounting for 40% of the global market share in 2016[342] and more than 50% of the global market share in 2019.[343] China is the world's leader in electric vehicles, manufacturing and buying half of all the plug-in electric cars (BEV and PHEV) in the world in 2018.[344] China is also the leading producer of batteries for electric vehicles as well as several key raw materials for batteries.[345] China had 174 GW of installed solar capacity by the end of 2018, which amounts to more than 40% of the global solar capacity.[346][347]

Wealth

China accounted for 17.9% of the world's total wealth in 2021, second highest in the world after the US.[348] It ranks at 65th at GDP (nominal) per capita, making it an upper-middle income country.[349] China brought more people out of extreme poverty than any other country in history[350][351]—between 1978 and 2018, China reduced extreme poverty by 800 million. China reduced the extreme poverty rate—per international standard, it refers to an income of less than $1.90/day—from 88% in 1981 to 1.85% by 2013.[352] The portion of people in China living below the international poverty line of $1.90 per day (2011 PPP) fell to 0.3% in 2018 from 66.3% in 1990. Using the lower-middle income poverty line of $3.20 per day, the portion fell to 2.9% in 2018 from 90.0% in 1990. Using the upper-middle income poverty line of $5.50 per day, the portion fell to 17.0% from 98.3% in 1990.[353]

From 1978 to 2018, the average standard of living multiplied by a factor of twenty-six.[354] Wages in China have grown a lot in the last 40 years—real (inflation-adjusted) wages grew seven-fold from 1978 to 2007.[355] Per capita incomes have risen significantly – when the PRC was founded in 1949, per capita income in China was one-fifth of the world average; per capita incomes now equal the world average itself.[354] China's development is highly uneven. Its major cities and coastal areas are far more prosperous compared to rural and interior regions.[356] It has a high level of economic inequality,[357] which has increased in the past few decades.[358] In 2018 China's Gini coefficient was 0.467, according to the World Bank.[11]

As of 2020, China was second in the world, after the US, in total number of billionaires and total number of millionaires, with 698 Chinese billionaires and 4.4 million millionaires.[359] In 2019, China overtook the US as the home to the highest number of people who have a net personal wealth of at least $110,000, according to the global wealth report by Credit Suisse.[360][361] According to the Hurun Global Rich List 2020, China is home to five of the world's top ten cities (Beijing, Shanghai, Hong Kong, Shenzhen, and Guangzhou in the 1st, 3rd, 4th, 5th, and 10th spots, respectively) by the highest number of billionaires, which is more than any other country.[362] China had 85 female billionaires as of January 2021, two-thirds of the global total, and minted 24 new female billionaires in 2020.[363] China has had the world's largest middle-class population since 2015,[364] and the middle-class grew to a size of 400 million by 2018.[365]

China in the global economy

 
China's nominal GDP trend from 1952 to 2015
Share of world GDP (PPP)[366]
Year Share
1980 2.25%
1990 3.99%
2000 7.24%
2010 13.62%
2020 18.18%

China is a member of the WTO and is the world's largest trading power, with a total international trade value of US$4.62 trillion in 2018.[367] China is the world's largest exporter and second-largest importer of goods.[368] Its foreign exchange reserves reached US$3.1 trillion as of 2019,[369] making its reserves by far the world's largest.[370][371] In 2012, China was the world's largest recipient of inward foreign direct investment (FDI), attracting $253 billion.[372] In 2014, China's foreign exchange remittances were $US64 billion making it the second largest recipient of remittances in the world.[373] China also invests abroad, with a total outward FDI of $62.4 billion in 2012,[372] and a number of major takeovers of foreign firms by Chinese companies.[374] China is a major owner of US public debt, holding trillions of dollars worth of U.S. Treasury bonds.[375][376] China's undervalued exchange rate has caused friction with other major economies,[377] and it has also been widely criticized for manufacturing large quantities of counterfeit goods.[378][379]

Largest economies by nominal GDP in 2022[380]

Following the 2007–08 financial crisis, Chinese authorities sought to actively wean off of its dependence on the U.S. dollar as a result of perceived weaknesses of the international monetary system.[381] To achieve those ends, China took a series of actions to further the internationalization of the Renminbi. In 2008, China established the dim sum bond market and expanded the Cross-Border Trade RMB Settlement Pilot Project, which helps establish pools of offshore RMB liquidity.[382][383] This was followed with bilateral agreements to settle trades directly in renminbi with Russia,[384] Japan,[385] Australia,[386] Singapore,[387] the United Kingdom,[388] and Canada.[389] As a result of the rapid internationalization of the renminbi, it became the eighth-most-traded currency in the world by 2018, an emerging international reserve currency,[390] and a component of the IMF's special drawing rights; however, partly due to capital controls that make the renminbi fall short of being a fully convertible currency, it remains far behind the Euro, Dollar and Japanese Yen in international trade volumes.[391] As of 2022, Yuan is the world's fifth-most traded currency.[392]

Science and technology

Historical

 
Earliest known written formula for gunpowder, from the Wujing Zongyao of 1044 CE

China was a world leader in science and technology until the Ming dynasty.[393] Ancient Chinese discoveries and inventions, such as papermaking, printing, the compass, and gunpowder (the Four Great Inventions), became widespread across East Asia, the Middle East and later Europe. Chinese mathematicians were the first to use negative numbers.[394][395] By the 17th century, the Western hemisphere surpassed China in scientific and technological advancement.[396] The causes of this early modern Great Divergence continue to be debated by scholars.[397]

After repeated military defeats by the European colonial powers and Japan in the 19th century, Chinese reformers began promoting modern science and technology as part of the Self-Strengthening Movement. After the Communists came to power in 1949, efforts were made to organize science and technology based on the model of the Soviet Union, in which scientific research was part of central planning.[398] After Mao's death in 1976, science and technology were promoted as one of the Four Modernizations,[399] and the Soviet-inspired academic system was gradually reformed.[400]

Modern era

 
Headquarters of Tencent in Shenzhen, one of the largest technology and entertainment companies in the world.[401]

Since the end of the Cultural Revolution, China has made significant investments in scientific research[402] and is quickly catching up with the US in R&D spending.[403][404] China officially spent around 2.4% of its GDP on R&D in 2020, totaling to around $377.8 billion.[405] According to the World Intellectual Property Indicators, China received more applications than the US did in 2018 and 2019 and ranked first globally in patents, utility models, trademarks, industrial designs, and creative goods exports in 2021.[406][407][408] It was ranked 11th in the Global Innovation Index in 2022, a considerable improvement from its rank of 35th in 2013.[409][410][411][412] Chinese supercomputers became the fastest in the world on a few occasions.[413] However, China has also struggled with developing several technologies domestically, such as the most advanced semiconductors and reliable jet engines.[414][415]

 
Launch of Shenzhou 13 by a Long March 2F rocket. China is one of the only three countries with independent human spaceflight capability.

China is developing its education system with an emphasis on science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM).[416] It became the world's largest publisher of scientific papers in 2016.[417][418][419] Chinese-born academicians have won prestigious prizes in the sciences and in mathematics, although most of them had conducted their winning research in Western nations.[aa][improper synthesis?]

Space program

The Chinese space program started in 1958 with some technology transfers from the Soviet Union. However, it did not launch the nation's first satellite until 1970 with the Dong Fang Hong I, which made China the fifth country to do so independently.[426] In 2003, China became the third country in the world to independently send humans into space with Yang Liwei's spaceflight aboard Shenzhou 5. as of 2022, sixteen Chinese nationals have journeyed into space, including two women. In 2011, China launched its first space station testbed, Tiangong-1.[427] In 2013, a Chinese robotic rover Yutu successfully touched down on the lunar surface as part of the Chang'e 3 mission.[428] In 2019, China became the first country to land a probe—Chang'e 4—on the far side of the Moon.[429] In 2020, Chang'e 5 successfully returned moon samples to the Earth, making China the third country to do so independently after the United States and the Soviet Union.[430] In 2021, China became the second nation in history to independently land a rover (Zhurong) on Mars, after the United States.[431] China completed its own modular space station, the Tiangong, in low Earth orbit on 3 November 2022.[432][433][434] On 29 November 2022, China performed its first in-orbit crew handover aboard the Tiangong.[435][436]

Infrastructure

After a decades-long infrastructural boom,[437] China has produced numerous world-leading infrastructural projects: China has the world's largest bullet train network,[438] the most supertall skyscrapers in the world,[439] the world's largest power plant (the Three Gorges Dam),[440] the largest energy generation capacity in the world,[441] a global satellite navigation system with the largest number of satellites in the world,[442] and has initiated the Belt and Road Initiative, a large global infrastructure building initiative with funding on the order of $50–100 billion per year.[443] The Belt and Road Initiative could be one of the largest development plans in modern history.[444]

Telecommunications

 
Internet penetration rates in China in the context of East Asia and Southeast Asia, 1995–2012

China is the largest telecom market in the world and currently has the largest number of active cellphones of any country in the world, with over 1.5 billion subscribers, as of 2018.[445][better source needed] It also has the world's largest number of internet and broadband users, with over 800 million Internet users as of 2018—equivalent to around 60% of its population—and almost all of them being mobile as well.[446] By 2018, China had more than 1 billion 4G users, accounting for 40% of world's total.[447] China is making rapid advances in 5G—by late 2018, China had started large-scale and commercial 5G trials.[448]

China Mobile, China Unicom and China Telecom, are the three large providers of mobile and internet in China. China Telecom alone served more than 145 million broadband subscribers and 300 million mobile users; China Unicom had about 300 million subscribers; and China Mobile, the largest of them all, had 925 million users, as of 2018.[449] Combined, the three operators had over 3.4 million 4G base-stations in China.[450] Several Chinese telecommunications companies, most notably Huawei and ZTE, have been accused of spying for the Chinese military.[451]

China has developed its own satellite navigation system, dubbed Beidou, which began offering commercial navigation services across Asia in 2012[452] as well as global services by the end of 2018.[453][454] Upon the completion of the 35th Beidou satellite, which was launched into orbit on 23 June 2020, Beidou followed GPS and GLONASS as the third completed global navigation satellite in the world.[455]

Transport

Since the late 1990s, China's national road network has been significantly expanded through the creation of a network of national highways and expressways. In 2018, China's highways had reached a total length of 142,500 km (88,500 mi), making it the longest highway system in the world.[456][better source needed] China has the world's largest market for automobiles, having surpassed the United States in both auto sales and production. A side-effect of the rapid growth of China's road network has been a significant rise in traffic accidents,[457] though the number of fatalities in traffic accidents fell by 20% from 2007 to 2017.[458][better source needed] In urban areas, bicycles remain a common mode of transport, despite the increasing prevalence of automobiles – as of 2012, there are approximately 470 million bicycles in China.[459]

 
The Beijing Daxing International Airport features the world's largest single-building airport terminal.

China's railways, which are state-owned, are among the busiest in the world, handling a quarter of the world's rail traffic volume on only 6 percent of the world's tracks in 2006.[460][better source needed] As of 2017, the country had 127,000 km (78,914 mi) of railways, the second longest network in the world.[461] The railways strain to meet enormous demand particularly during the Chinese New Year holiday, when the world's largest annual human migration takes place.[462]

China's high-speed rail (HSR) system started construction in the early 2000s. By the end of 2020, high speed rail in China had reached 37,900 kilometers (23,550 miles) of dedicated lines alone, making it the longest HSR network in the world.[463][464] Services on the Beijing–Shanghai, Beijing–Tianjin, and Chengdu–Chongqing Lines reach up to 350 km/h (217 mph), making them the fastest conventional high speed railway services in the world. With an annual ridership of over 2.29 billion passengers in 2019 it is the world's busiest.[465][better source needed] The network includes the Beijing–Guangzhou–Shenzhen High-Speed Railway, the single longest HSR line in the world, and the Beijing–Shanghai High-Speed Railway, which has three of longest railroad bridges in the world.[466] The Shanghai Maglev Train, which reaches 431 km/h (268 mph), is the fastest commercial train service in the world.[467]

 
The Port of Shanghai's deep water harbor on Yangshan Island in the Hangzhou Bay is the world's busiest container port since 2010.

Since 2000, the growth of rapid transit systems in Chinese cities has accelerated.[468] As of January 2021, 44 Chinese cities have urban mass transit systems in operation[469] and 39 more have metro systems approved.[470] As of 2020, China boasts the five longest metro systems in the world with the networks in Shanghai, Beijing, Guangzhou, Chengdu and Shenzhen being the largest.

There were approximately 229 airports in 2017, with around 240 planned by 2020. China has over 2,000 river and seaports, about 130 of which are open to foreign shipping.[471] In 2017, the Ports of Shanghai, Hong Kong, Shenzhen, Ningbo-Zhoushan, Guangzhou, Qingdao and Tianjin ranked in the Top 10 in the world in container traffic and cargo tonnage.[472]

Water supply and sanitation

Water supply and sanitation infrastructure in China is facing challenges such as rapid urbanization, as well as water scarcity, contamination, and pollution.[473] According to data presented by the Joint Monitoring Program for Water Supply and Sanitation of WHO and UNICEF in 2015, about 36% of the rural population in China still did not have access to improved sanitation.[474] The ongoing South–North Water Transfer Project intends to abate water shortage in the north.[475]

Demographics

 
A 2009 population density map of the People's Republic of China, with territories not under its control in blue. The eastern coastal provinces are much more densely populated than the western interior.

The national census of 2020 recorded the population of the People's Republic of China as approximately 1,411,778,724. According to the 2020 census, about 17.95% of the population were 14 years old or younger, 63.35% were between 15 and 59 years old, and 18.7% were over 60 years old.[8] The population growth rate for 2013 is estimated to be 0.46%.[476] China used to make up much of the world's poor; now it makes up much of the world's middle-class.[477] Although a middle-income country by Western standards, China's rapid growth has pulled hundreds of millions—800 million, to be more precise[478]—of its people out of poverty since 1978. By 2013, less than 2% of the Chinese population lived below the international poverty line of US$1.9 per day, down from 88% in 1981.[352] From 2009 to 2018, the unemployment rate in China has averaged about 4%.[479]

Given concerns about population growth, China implemented a two-child limit during the 1970s, and, in 1979, began to advocate for an even stricter limit of one child per family. Beginning in the mid-1980s, however, given the unpopularity of the strict limits, China began to allow some major exemptions, particularly in rural areas, resulting in what was actually a "1.5"-child policy from the mid-1980s to 2015 (ethnic minorities were also exempt from one child limits). The next major loosening of the policy was enacted in December 2013, allowing families to have two children if one parent is an only child.[480] In 2016, the one-child policy was replaced in favor of a two-child policy.[481] A three-child policy was announced on 31 May 2021, due to population aging,[482] and in July 2021, all family size limits as well as penalties for exceeding them were removed.[483] According to data from the 2020 census, China's total fertility rate is 1.3, but some experts believe that after adjusting for the transient effects of the relaxation of restrictions, the country's actual total fertility rate is as low as 1.1.[484]

According to one group of scholars, one-child limits had little effect on population growth[485] or the size of the total population.[486] However, these scholars have been challenged. Their own counterfactual model of fertility decline without such restrictions implies that China averted more than 500 million births between 1970 and 2015, a number which may reach one billion by 2060 given all the lost descendants of births averted during the era of fertility restrictions, with one-child restrictions accounting for the great bulk of that reduction.[487] The policy, along with traditional preference for boys, may have contributed to an imbalance in the sex ratio at birth.[488][489] According to the 2010 census, the sex ratio at birth was 118.06 boys for every 100 girls,[490] which is beyond the normal range of around 105 boys for every 100 girls.[491] The 2010 census found that males accounted for 51.27 percent of the total population.[490] However, China's sex ratio is more balanced than it was in 1953, when males accounted for 51.82 percent of the total population.[490]

Ethnic groups

 
Ethnolinguistic map of China

China legally recognizes 56 distinct ethnic groups, who altogether comprise the Zhonghua Minzu. The largest of these nationalities are the ethnic Chinese or "Han", who constitute more than 90% of the total population.[492] The Han Chinese – the world's largest single ethnic group[493] – outnumber other ethnic groups in every provincial-level division except Tibet and Xinjiang.[494] Ethnic minorities account for less than 10% of the population of China, according to the 2010 census.[492] Compared with the 2000 population census, the Han population increased by 66,537,177 persons, or 5.74%, while the population of the 55 national minorities combined increased by 7,362,627 persons, or 6.92%.[492] The 2010 census recorded a total of 593,832 foreign nationals living in China. The largest such groups were from South Korea (120,750), the United States (71,493) and Japan (66,159).[495]

Languages

 
A trilingual sign in Xishuangbanna, with Tai Lü language on the top
 
Lihaozhai High School in Jianshui, Yunnan. The sign is in Hani (Latin alphabet), Nisu (Yi script), and Chinese.

There are as many as 292 living languages in China.[496] The languages most commonly spoken belong to the Sinitic branch of the Sino-Tibetan language family, which contains Mandarin (spoken by 70% of the population),[497] and other varieties of Chinese language: Yue (including Cantonese and Taishanese), Wu (including Shanghainese and Suzhounese), Min (including Fuzhounese, Hokkien and Teochew), Xiang, Gan and Hakka. Languages of the Tibeto-Burman branch, including Tibetan, Qiang, Naxi and Yi, are spoken across the Tibetan and Yunnan–Guizhou Plateau. Other ethnic minority languages in southwest China include Zhuang, Thai, Dong and Sui of the Tai-Kadai family, Miao and Yao of the Hmong–Mien family, and Wa of the Austroasiatic family. Across northeastern and northwestern China, local ethnic groups speak Altaic languages including Manchu, Mongolian and several Turkic languages: Uyghur, Kazakh, Kyrgyz, Salar and Western Yugur. Korean is spoken natively along the border with North Korea. Sarikoli, the language of Tajiks in western Xinjiang, is an Indo-European language. Taiwanese aborigines, including a small population on the mainland, speak Austronesian languages.[498]

Standard Mandarin, a variety of Mandarin based on the Beijing dialect, is the official national language of China and is used as a lingua franca in the country between people of different linguistic backgrounds.[499][500] Mongolian, Uyghur, Tibetan, Zhuang and various other languages are also regionally recognized throughout the country.[501]

Chinese characters have been used as the written script for the Sinitic languages for thousands of years. They allow speakers of mutually unintelligible Chinese varieties to communicate with each other through writing. In 1956, the government introduced simplified characters, which have supplanted the older traditional characters in mainland China. Chinese characters are romanized using the Pinyin system. Tibetan uses an alphabet based on an Indic script. Uyghur is most commonly written in Persian alphabet-based Uyghur Arabic alphabet. The Mongolian script used in China and the Manchu script are both derived from the Old Uyghur alphabet. Zhuang uses both an official Latin alphabet script and a traditional Chinese character script.[citation needed]

Urbanization

 
Map of the ten largest cities in China (2010)

China has urbanized significantly in recent decades. The percent of the country's population living in urban areas increased from 20% in 1980 to over 60% in 2019.[502][503][504] It is estimated that China's urban population will reach one billion by 2030, potentially equivalent to one-eighth of the world population.[503][504]

China has over 160 cities with a population of over one million,[505] including the 17 megacities as of 2021[506][507] (cities with a population of over 10 million) of Chongqing, Shanghai, Beijing, Chengdu, Guangzhou, Shenzhen, Tianjin, Xi'an, Suzhou, Zhengzhou, Wuhan, Hangzhou, Linyi, Shijiazhuang, Dongguan, Qingdao and Changsha.[508] Among them, the total permanent population of Chongqing, Shanghai, Beijing and Chengdu is above 20 million.[509] Shanghai is China's most populous urban area[510][511] while Chongqing is its largest city proper, the only city in China with the largest permanent population of over 30 million.[512] By 2025, it is estimated that the country will be home to 221 cities with over a million inhabitants.[503] The figures in the table below are from the 2017 census,[513] and are only estimates of the urban populations within administrative city limits; a different ranking exists when considering the total municipal populations (which includes suburban and rural populations). The large "floating populations" of migrant workers make conducting censuses in urban areas difficult;[514] the figures below include only long-term residents.[citation needed]

 
Largest cities or municipalities in the People's Republic of China
China Urban Construction Statistical Yearbook 2020 Urban Population and Urban Temporary Population [515][note 1][note 2]
Rank Name Province Pop. Rank Name Province Pop.
 
Shanghai
 
Beijing
1 Shanghai SH 24,281,400 11 Hong Kong HK 7,448,900  
Guangzhou
 
Shenzhen
2 Beijing BJ 19,164,000 12 Zhengzhou HA 7,179,400
3 Guangzhou GD 13,858,700 13 Nanjing JS 6,823,500
4 Shenzhen GD 13,438,800 14 Xi'an SN 6,642,100
5 Tianjin TJ 11,744,400 15 Jinan SD 6,409,600
6 Chongqing CQ 11,488,000 16 Shenyang LN 5,900,000
7 Dongguan GD 9,752,500 17 Qingdao SD 5,501,400
8 Chengdu SC 8,875,600 18 Harbin HL 5,054,500
9 Wuhan HB 8,652,900 19 Hefei AH 4,750,100
10 Hangzhou ZJ 8,109,000 20 Changchun JL 4,730,900
  1. ^ Population of Hong Kong as of 2018 estimate.[516]
  2. ^ The data of Chongqing in the list is the data of "Metropolitan Developed Economic Area", which contains two parts: "City Proper" and "Metropolitan Area". The "City proper" are consist of 9 districts: Yuzhong, Dadukou, Jiangbei, Shapingba, Jiulongpo, Nan'an, Beibei, Yubei, & Banan, has the urban population of 5,646,300 as of 2018. And the "Metropolitan Area" are consist of 12 districts: Fuling, Changshou, Jiangjin, Hechuan, Yongchuan, Nanchuan, Qijiang, Dazu, Bishan, Tongliang, Tongnan, & Rongchang, has the urban population of 5,841,700.[517] Total urban population of all 26 districts of Chongqing are up to 15,076,600.

Education

Since 1986, compulsory education in China comprises primary and junior secondary school, which together last for nine years.[520] In 2021, about 91.4 percent of students continued their education at a three-year senior secondary school.[521] The Gaokao, China's national university entrance exam, is a prerequisite for entrance into most higher education institutions. In 2010, 24 percent of secondary school graduates were enrolled in higher education.[522] This number increased significantly over the last decades, reaching a tertiary school enrolment of 58.42 percent in 2020.[523] Vocational education is available to students at the secondary and tertiary level.[524] More than 10 million Chinese students graduated from vocational colleges nationwide every year.[525]

China has the largest education system in the world, with about 282 million students and 17.32 million full-time teachers in over 530,000 schools.[526] In February 2006, the government pledged to provide completely free nine-year education, including textbooks and fees.[527] Annual education investment went from less than US$50 billion in 2003 to more than US$817 billion in 2020.[528][529] However, there remains an inequality in education spending. In 2010, the annual education expenditure per secondary school student in Beijing totalled ¥20,023, while in Guizhou, one of the poorest provinces in China, only totalled ¥3,204.[530] Free compulsory education in China consists of primary school and junior secondary school between the ages of 6 and 15. In 2020, the graduation enrollment ratio at compulsory education level reached 95.2 percent, exceeding average levels recorded in high-income countries,[526] and around 91.2% of Chinese have received secondary education.[524]

China's literacy rate has grown dramatically, from only 20% in 1949 and 65.5% in 1979.[531] to 97% of the population over age 15 in 2018.[532] In the same year, China (Beijing, Shanghai, Jiangsu, and Zhejiang) was ranked the highest in the world in the Programme for International Student Assessment ranking for all three categories of Mathematics, Science and Reading.[533]

As of 2021, China has over 3,000 universities, with over 44.3 million students enrolled in mainland China and 240 million Chinese citizens have received high education, making China the largest higher education system in the world.[534][535][536] As of 2021, China had the world's second-highest number of top universities (the highest in Asia & Oceania region).[537] Currently, China trails only the United States in terms of representation on lists of top 200 universities according to the Academic Ranking of World Universities (ARWU).[538] China is home to the two of the highest ranking universities (Tsinghua University and Peking University) in Asia and emerging economies according to the Times Higher Education World University Rankings.[539] As of 2022, two universities in Mainland China rank in the world's top 15, with Peking University (12th) and Tsinghua University (14th) and three other universities ranking in the world's top 50, namely Fudan, Zhejiang, and Shanghai Jiao Tong according to the QS World University Rankings.[540] These universities are members of the C9 League, an alliance of elite Chinese universities offering comprehensive and leading education.[541]

Health

 
Chart showing the rise of China's Human Development Index from 1970 to 2010

The National Health and Family Planning Commission, together with its counterparts in the local commissions, oversees the health needs of the Chinese population.[542] An emphasis on public health and preventive medicine has characterized Chinese health policy since the early 1950s. At that time, the Communist Party started the Patriotic Health Campaign, which was aimed at improving sanitation and hygiene, as well as treating and preventing several diseases. Diseases such as cholera, typhoid and scarlet fever, which were previously rife in China, were nearly eradicated by the campaign.[citation needed]

After Deng Xiaoping began instituting economic reforms in 1978, the health of the Chinese public improved rapidly because of better nutrition, although many of the free public health services provided in the countryside disappeared along with the People's Communes. Healthcare in China became mostly privatized, and experienced a significant rise in quality. In 2009, the government began a 3-year large-scale healthcare provision initiative worth US$124 billion.[543] By 2011, the campaign resulted in 95% of China's population having basic health insurance coverage.[544] In 2011, China was estimated to be the world's third-largest supplier of pharmaceuticals, but its population has suffered from the development and distribution of counterfeit medications.[545]

As of 2017, the average life expectancy at birth in China is 76 years,[546] and the infant mortality rate is 7 per thousand.[547] Both have improved significantly since the 1950s.[ab] Rates of stunting, a condition caused by malnutrition, have declined from 33.1% in 1990 to 9.9% in 2010.[550] Despite significant improvements in health and the construction of advanced medical facilities, China has several emerging public health problems, such as respiratory illnesses caused by widespread air pollution,[551] hundreds of millions of cigarette smokers,[552] and an increase in obesity among urban youths.[553][554] China's large population and densely populated cities have led to serious disease outbreaks in recent years, such as the 2003 outbreak of SARS, although this has since been largely contained.[555] In 2010, air pollution caused 1.2 million premature deaths in China.[556]

The COVID-19 pandemic was first identified in Wuhan in December 2019.[557][558] Further studies are being carried out around the world on a possible origin for the virus.[559][560] The Chinese government has been criticized for its handling of the epidemic and accused of concealing the extent of the outbreak before it became an international pandemic.[561]

Religion

 
Geographic distribution of religions in China.[562][563][564][565]
Chinese folk religion (including Confucianism, Taoism, and groups of Chinese Buddhism)
Buddhism tout court
Islam
Ethnic minorities' indigenous religions
Mongolian folk religion
Northeast China folk religion influenced by Tungus and Manchu shamanism; widespread Shanrendao

The government of the People's Republic of China officially espouses state atheism,[566] and has conducted antireligious campaigns to this end.[567] Religious affairs and issues in the country are overseen by the State Administration for Religious Affairs.[568] Freedom of religion is guaranteed by China's constitution, although religious organizations that lack official approval can be subject to state persecution.[290][569]

Over the millennia, Chinese civilization has been influenced by various religious movements. The "three teachings", including Confucianism, Taoism, and Buddhism (Chinese Buddhism), historically have a significant role in shaping Chinese culture,[570][571] enriching a theological and spiritual framework which harks back to the early Shang and Zhou dynasty. Chinese popular or folk religion, which is framed by the three teachings and other traditions,[572] consists in allegiance to the shen (), a character that signifies the "energies of generation", who can be deities of the environment or ancestral principles of human groups, concepts of civility, culture heroes, many of whom feature in Chinese mythology and history.[573] Among the most popular cults are those of Mazu (goddess of the seas),[574] Huangdi (one of the two divine patriarchs of the Chinese race),[574][575] Guandi (god of war and business), Caishen (god of prosperity and richness), Pangu and many others. China is home to many of the world's tallest religious statues, including the tallest of all, the Spring Temple Buddha in Henan.[576]

Clear data on religious affiliation in China is difficult to gather due to varying definitions of "religion" and the unorganized, diffusive nature of Chinese religious traditions. Scholars note that in China there is no clear boundary between three teachings religions and local folk religious practice.[570] A 2015 poll conducted by Gallup International found that 61% of Chinese people self-identified as "convinced atheist",[577] though it is worthwhile to note that Chinese religions or some of their strands are definable as non-theistic and humanistic religions, since they do not believe that divine creativity is completely transcendent, but it is inherent in the world and in particular in the human being.[578] According to a 2014 study, approximately 74% are either non-religious or practice Chinese folk belief, 16% are Buddhists, 2% are Christians, 1% are Muslims, and 8% adhere to other religions including Taoists and folk salvationism.[579][580] In addition to Han people's local religious practices, there are also various ethnic minority groups in China who maintain their traditional autochthone religions. The various folk religions today comprise 2–3% of the population, while Confucianism as a religious self-identification is common within the intellectual class. Significant faiths specifically connected to certain ethnic groups include Tibetan Buddhism and the Islamic religion of the Hui, Uyghur, Kazakh, Kyrgyz and other peoples in Northwest China.[citation needed] The 2010 population census reported the total number of Muslims in the country as 23.14 million.[581]

A 2021 poll from Ipsos and the Policy Institute at King's College London found that 35% of Chinese people said there was tension between different religious groups, which was the second lowest percentage of the 28 countries surveyed.[582][583]

Culture

 
The Temple of Heaven, a center of heaven worship and an UNESCO World Heritage site, symbolizes the Interactions Between Heaven and Mankind.[584]
 
Fenghuang County, an ancient town that harbors many architectural remains of Ming and Qing styles.

Since ancient times, Chinese culture has been heavily influenced by Confucianism. For much of the country's dynastic era, opportunities for social advancement could be provided by high performance in the prestigious imperial examinations, which have their origins in the Han dynasty.[585] The literary emphasis of the exams affected the general perception of cultural refinement in China, such as the belief that calligraphy, poetry and painting were higher forms of art than dancing or drama. Chinese culture has long emphasized a sense of deep history and a largely inward-looking national perspective.[586] Examinations and a culture of merit remain greatly valued in China today.[587]

 
A Moon gate in a Chinese garden.

The first leaders of the People's Republic of China were born into the traditional imperial order but were influenced by the May Fourth Movement and reformist ideals. They sought to change some traditional aspects of Chinese culture, such as rural land tenure, sexism, and the Confucian system of education, while preserving others, such as the family structure and culture of obedience to the state. Some observers see the period following the establishment of the PRC in 1949 as a continuation of traditional Chinese dynastic history, while others claim that the Communist Party's rule has damaged the foundations of Chinese culture, especially through political movements such as the Cultural Revolution of the 1960s, where many aspects of traditional culture were destroyed, having been denounced as "regressive and harmful" or "vestiges of feudalism". Many important aspects of traditional Chinese morals and culture, such as Confucianism, art, literature, and performing arts like Peking opera,[588] were altered to conform to government policies and propaganda at the time. Access to foreign media remains heavily restricted.[589]

Today, the Chinese government has accepted numerous elements of traditional Chinese culture as being integral to Chinese society. With the rise of Chinese nationalism and the end of the Cultural Revolution, various forms of traditional Chinese art, literature, music, film, fashion and architecture have seen a vigorous revival,[590][591] and folk and variety art in particular have sparked interest nationally and even worldwide.[592]

Tourism

China received 55.7 million inbound international visitors in 2010,[593] and in 2012 was the third-most-visited country in the world.[594] It also experiences an enormous volume of domestic tourism; an estimated 740 million Chinese holidaymakers traveled within the country in October 2012.[595] China hosts the world's second-largest number of World Heritage Sites (56) after Italy, and is one of the most popular tourist destinations in the world (first in the Asia-Pacific).

Literature

 
The stories in Journey to the West are common themes in Peking opera.

Chinese literature is based on the literature of the Zhou dynasty.[596] Concepts covered within the Chinese classic texts present a wide range of thoughts and subjects including calendar, military, astrology, herbology, geography and many others.[597] Some of the most important early texts include the I Ching and the Shujing within the Four Books and Five Classics which served as the Confucian authoritative books for the state-sponsored curriculum in dynastic era.[598] Inherited from the Classic of Poetry, classical Chinese poetry developed to its floruit during the Tang dynasty. Li Bai and Du Fu opened the forking ways for the poetic circles through romanticism and realism respectively.[599] Chinese historiography began with the Shiji, the overall scope of the historiographical tradition in China is termed the Twenty-Four Histories, which set a vast stage for Chinese fictions along with Chinese mythology and folklore.[600] Pushed by a burgeoning citizen class in the Ming dynasty, Chinese classical fiction rose to a boom of the historical, town and gods and demons fictions as represented by the Four Great Classical Novels which include Water Margin, Romance of the Three Kingdoms, Journey to the West and Dream of the Red Chamber.[601] Along with the wuxia fictions of Jin Yong and Liang Yusheng,[602] it remains an enduring source of popular culture in the East Asian cultural sphere.[603]

In the wake of the New Culture Movement after the end of the Qing dynasty, Chinese literature embarked on a new era with written vernacular Chinese for ordinary citizens. Hu Shih and Lu Xun were pioneers in modern literature.[604] Various literary genres, such as misty poetry, scar literature, young adult fiction and the xungen literature, which is influenced by magic realism,[605] emerged following the Cultural Revolution. Mo Yan, a xungen literature author, was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2012.[606]

Cuisine

 
Map showing major regional cuisines of China

Chinese cuisine is highly diverse, drawing on several millennia of culinary history and geographical variety, in which the most influential are known as the "Eight Major Cuisines", including Sichuan, Cantonese, Jiangsu, Shandong, Fujian, Hunan, Anhui, and Zhejiang cuisines.[607] All of them are featured by the precise skills of shaping, heating, and flavoring.[608][better source needed] Chinese cuisine is also known for its width of cooking methods and ingredients,[609] as well as food therapy that is emphasized by traditional Chinese medicine.[610][better source needed] Generally, China's staple food is rice in the south, wheat-based breads and noodles in the north. The diet of the common people in pre-modern times was largely grain and simple vegetables, with meat reserved for special occasions. The bean products, such as tofu and soy milk, remain as a popular source of protein.[611] Pork is now the most popular meat in China, accounting for about three-fourths of the country's total meat consumption.[612] While pork dominates the meat market, there is also the vegetarian Buddhist cuisine and the pork-free Chinese Islamic cuisine. Southern cuisine, due to the area's proximity to the ocean and milder climate, has a wide variety of seafood and vegetables; it differs in many respects from the wheat-based diets across dry northern China. Numerous offshoots of Chinese food, such as Hong Kong cuisine and American Chinese food, have emerged in the nations that play host to the Chinese diaspora.[citation needed]

Music

Chinese music covers a highly diverse range of music from traditional music to modern music. Chinese music dates back before the pre-imperial times. Traditional Chinese musical instruments were traditionally grouped into eight categories known as bayin (八音). Traditional Chinese opera is a form of musical theatre in China originating thousands of years and has regional style forms such as Beijing opera and Cantonese opera.[613] Chinese pop (C-Pop) includes mandopop and cantopop. Chinese rap, Chinese hip hop and Hong Kong hip hop have become popular in contemporary times.[614]

Cinema

Cinema was first introduced to China in 1896 and the first Chinese film, Dingjun Mountain, was released in 1905.[615] China has the largest number of movie screens in the world since 2016,[616] China became the largest cinema market in the world in 2020.[617][618] The top 3 highest-grossing films in China currently are Wolf Warrior 2 (2017), Ne Zha (2019), and The Wandering Earth (2019).[619]

Fashion

Hanfu is the historical clothing of the Han people in China. The qipao or cheongsam is a popular Chinese female dress.[620] The hanfu movement has been popular in contemporary times and seeks to revitalize Hanfu clothing.[621]

Sports

China has one of the oldest sporting cultures in the world. There is evidence that archery (shèjiàn) was practiced during the Western Zhou dynasty. Swordplay (jiànshù) and cuju, a sport loosely related to association football[622] date back to China's early dynasties as well.[623]

 
Go is an abstract strategy board game for two players, in which the aim is to surround more territory than the opponent and was invented in China more than 2,500 years ago.

Physical fitness is widely emphasized in Chinese culture, with morning exercises such as qigong and t'ai chi ch'uan widely practiced,[624] and commercial gyms and private fitness clubs are gaining popularity across the country.[625] Basketball is currently the most popular spectator sport in China.[626] The Chinese Basketball Association and the American National Basketball Association have a huge following among the people, with native or ethnic Chinese players such as Yao Ming and Yi Jianlian held in high esteem.[627] China's professional football league, now known as Chinese Super League, was established in 1994, it is the largest football market in Asia.[628] Other popular sports in the country include martial arts, table tennis, badminton, swimming and snooker. Board games such as go (known as wéiqí in Chinese), xiangqi, mahjong, and more recently chess, are also played at a professional level.[629] In addition, China is home to a huge number of cyclists, with an estimated 470 million bicycles as of 2012.[459] Many more traditional sports, such as dragon boat racing, Mongolian-style wrestling and horse racing are also popular.[630]

China has participated in the Olympic Games since 1932, although it has only participated as the PRC since 1952. China hosted the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, where its athletes received 48 gold medals – the highest number of gold medals of any participating nation that year.[631] China also won the most medals of any nation at the 2012 Summer Paralympics, with 231 overall, including 95 gold medals.[632][633] In 2011, Shenzhen in Guangdong, China hosted the 2011 Summer Universiade. China hosted the 2013 East Asian Games in Tianjin and the 2014 Summer Youth Olympics in Nanjing; the first country to host both regular and Youth Olympics. Beijing and its nearby city Zhangjiakou of Hebei province collaboratively hosted the 2022 Olympic Winter Games, making Beijing the first dual olympic city in the world by holding both the Summer Olympics and the Winter Olympics.[634][635]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Chinese and English are the official languages in Hong Kong only. Chinese and Portuguese are the official languages in Macau only.
  2. ^
  3. ^ The top position in one-party ruling China.
  4. ^ Although PRC President is head of state, it is a largely ceremonial office with limited power under CCP General Secretary.
  5. ^ Including both state and party's central military chairs.
  6. ^ Chairman of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference.
  7. ^ The area given is the official United Nations figure for the mainland and excludes Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan.[3] It also excludes the Trans-Karakoram Tract (5,180 km2 (2,000 sq mi)), Aksai Chin (38,000 km2 (15,000 sq mi)) and other territories in dispute with India. The total area of China is listed as 9,572,900 km2 (3,696,100 sq mi) by the Encyclopædia Britannica.[4] For further information, see Territorial changes of the People's Republic of China.
  8. ^ This figure was calculated using data from the CIA World Factbook.[6]
  9. ^ GDP figures exclude Taiwan, and the special administrative regions of Hong Kong and Macau.
  10. ^
  11. ^ Chinese: 中华人民共和国; pinyin: Zhōnghuá Rénmín Gònghéguó
  12. ^ China's border with Pakistan is disputed by India, which claims the entire Kashmir region as its territory.
  13. ^ The total area ranking relative to the United States depends on the measurement of the total areas of both countries. See List of countries and dependencies by area for more information. The following two primary sources (non-mirrored) represent the range (min./max.) of estimates of China's and the United States' total areas. Both sources (1) exclude Taiwan from the area of China; (2) exclude China's coastal and territorial waters. However, the CIA World Factbook includes the United States coastal and territorial waters, while Encyclopædia Britannica excludes the United States coastal and territorial waters.
    1. The Encyclopædia Britannica lists China as world's third-largest country (after Russia and Canada) with a total area of 9,572,900 km2,[13] and the United States as fourth-largest at 9,525,067 km2.[14]
    2. The CIA World Factbook lists China as the fourth-largest country (after Russia, Canada and the United States) with a total area of 9,596,960 km2,[15] and the United States as the third-largest at 9,833,517 km2.[16]

    Notably, the Encyclopædia Britannica specifies the United States' area (excluding coastal and territorial waters) as 9,525,067 km2, which is less than either source's figure given for China's area.[14] Therefore, while it can be determined that China has a larger area excluding coastal and territorial waters, it is unclear which country has a larger area including coastal and territorial waters.


    The United Nations Statistics Division's figure for the United States is 9,833,517 km2 (3,796,742 sq mi) and China is 9,596,961 km2 (3,705,407 sq mi). These closely match the CIA World Factbook figures and similarly include coastal and territorial waters for the United States, but exclude coastal and territorial waters for China.


    Further explanation of disputed ranking: The dispute about which is the world's third-largest country arose from the inclusion of coastal and territorial waters for the United States. This discrepancy was deduced from comparing the CIA World Factbook and its previous iterations[17] against the information for United States in Encyclopædia Britannica, particularly its footnote section.[14] In sum, according to older versions of the CIA World Factbook (from 1982 to 1996), the U.S. was listed as the world's fourth-largest country (after Russia, Canada, and China) with a total area of 9,372,610 km2 (3,618,780 sq mi). However, in the 1997 edition, the U.S. added coastal waters to its total area (increasing it to 9,629,091 km2 (3,717,813 sq mi)). And then again in 2007, U.S. added territorial water to its total area (increasing it to 9,833,517 km2 (3,796,742 sq mi)). During this time, China's total area remained unchanged. In other words, no coastal or territorial water area was added to China's total area figure. The United States has a coastal water area of 109,362 km2 (42,225 sq mi), and a territorial water area of 195,213 km2 (75,372 sq mi), for a total of 304,575 km2 (117,597 sq mi) of additional water space. This is larger than entire countries like Italy, New Zealand and the United Kingdom. Adding this figure to the U.S. will boost it over China in ranking since China's coastal and territorial water figures are currently unknown (no official publication) and thus cannot be added into China's total area figure.

  14. ^ a b China claims the de facto state of Taiwan, which it does not control, as its disputed 23rd province, i.e. Taiwan Province. See § Administrative divisions for more details.
  15. ^ The island of Hainan was taken on 1 May 1950 while the unrecognized polity of Tibet was annexed on 23 May 1951.
  16. ^ The KMT solely governed the island until its transition to democracy in 1996.
  17. ^ "... Next vnto this, is found the great China, whose kyng is thought to bee the greatest prince in the worlde, and is named Santoa Raia".[19][20]
  18. ^ "... The Very Great Kingdom of China".[21] (Portuguese: ... O Grande Reino da China ...).[22]
  19. ^ Although this is the present meaning of guó, in Old Chinese (when its pronunciation was something like /*qʷˤək/)[28] it meant the walled city of the Chinese and the areas they could control from them.[29]
  20. ^ Its earliest extant use is on the ritual bronze vessel He zun, where it apparently refers to only the Shang's immediate demesne conquered by the Zhou.[30]
  21. ^ Its meaning "Zhou's royal demesne" is attested from the 6th-century BC Classic of History, which states "Huangtian bestowed the lands and the peoples of the central state to the ancestors" (皇天既付中國民越厥疆土于先王).[31]
  22. ^ Owing to Qin Shi Huang's earlier policy involving the "burning of books and burying of scholars", the destruction of the confiscated copies at Xianyang was an event similar to the destructions of the Library of Alexandria in the west. Even those texts that did survive had to be painstakingly reconstructed from memory, luck, or forgery.[59] The Old Texts of the Five Classics were said to have been found hidden in a wall at the Kong residence in Qufu. Mei Ze's "rediscovered" edition of the Book of Documents was only shown to be a forgery in the Qing dynasty.
  23. ^ China is larger than Canada and the United States in terms of land area.
  24. ^ According to the Encyclopædia Britannica, the total area of the United States, at 9,522,055 km2 (3,676,486 sq mi), is slightly smaller than that of China. Meanwhile, the CIA World Factbook states that China's total area was greater than that of the United States until the coastal waters of the Great Lakes was added to the United States' total area in 1996. From 1989 through 1996, the total area of US was listed as 9,372,610 km2 (3,618,780 sq mi) (land area plus inland water only). The listed total area changed to 9,629,091 km2 (3,717,813 sq mi) in 1997 (with the Great Lakes areas and the coastal waters added), to 9,631,418 km2 (3,718,711 sq mi) in 2004, to 9,631,420 km2 (3,718,710 sq mi) in 2006, and to 9,826,630 km2 (3,794,080 sq mi) in 2007 (territorial waters added).
  25. ^ China's border with Pakistan and part of its border with India falls in the disputed region of Kashmir. The area under Pakistani administration is claimed by India, while the area under Indian administration is claimed by Pakistan.
  26. ^ Meaning cities that are not divided into districts (不设区的市), counties (县), city districts (市辖区), towns (镇), townships (乡), and lastly ethnic townships (民族乡)
  27. ^ Tsung-Dao Lee,[420] Chen Ning Yang,[420] Daniel C. Tsui,[421] Charles K. Kao,[422] Yuan T. Lee,[423] Tu Youyou[424] Shing-Tung Yau[425]
  28. ^ The national life expectancy at birth rose from about 31 years in 1949 to 75 years in 2008,[548] and infant mortality decreased from 300 per thousand in the 1950s to around 33 per thousand in 2001.[549]

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china, people, republic, redirects, here, republic, taiwan, redirects, here, other, uses, disambiguation, disambiguation, chinese, 中国, pinyin, zhōngguó, officially, people, republic, country, east, asia, world, most, populous, country, with, population, exceed. People s Republic of China redirects here For the Republic of China see Taiwan PRC redirects here For other uses see PRC disambiguation and China disambiguation China Chinese 中国 pinyin Zhōngguo officially the People s Republic of China PRC k is a country in East Asia It is the world s most populous country with a population exceeding 1 4 billion slightly ahead of India China spans the equivalent of five time zones and borders fourteen countries by land l the most of any country in the world tied with Russia Covering an area of approximately 9 6 million square kilometres 3 700 000 sq mi it is the world s third largest country by total land area m The country consists of 22 provinces n five autonomous regions four municipalities and two Special Administrative Regions Hong Kong and Macau The national capital is Beijing and the most populous city and financial center is Shanghai People s Republic of China中华人民共和国 Chinese Zhōnghua Renmin Gongheguo Pinyin Flag National EmblemAnthem 义勇军进行曲 Yiyǒngjun Jinxingqǔ March of the Volunteers source source track track track track track track track track track track track track track track track track track track track track track track track track track track track track track track Territory controlled by the People s Republic of China shown in dark green territory claimed but not controlled shown in light greenCapitalBeijing39 55 N 116 23 E 39 917 N 116 383 E 39 917 116 383Largest cityby populationShanghaiOfficial languagesStandard Chinese a Recognized regional languagesMongolianUyghurTibetanZhuangOthersOfficial scriptSimplified Chinese b Ethnic groups 2020 1 91 1 Han Chinese8 9 OthersReligion 2020 2 74 5 No religion Folk18 3 Buddhism5 2 Christianity1 6 Islam0 4 OthersDemonym s ChineseGovernmentUnitary Marxist Leninist one party socialist republic CCP General Secretary c President d CMC Chairman e Xi Jinping PremierLi Keqiang Congress ChairmanLi Zhanshu CPPCC Chairman f Wang YangLegislatureNational People s CongressFormation First pre imperial dynastyc 2070 BCE First imperial dynasty221 BCE Republic established1 January 1912 Proclamation of the People s Republic1 October 1949 First constitution20 September 1954 Current constitution4 December 1982 Most recent polity admitted20 December 1999Area Total9 596 961 km2 3 705 407 sq mi g 5 3rd 4th Water 2 8 h Population 2022 estimate1 410 539 758 7 1st 2020 census1 411 778 724 8 1st Density145 9 km2 375 5 sq mi 83rd GDP PPP 2022 estimate Total 30 074 trillion 10 1st Per capita 21 291 10 72nd GDP nominal 2022 estimate Total 18 321 trillion i 10 2nd Per capita 12 970 10 65th Gini 2019 38 2 11 mediumHDI 2021 0 768 12 high 79thCurrencyRenminbi 元 j CNY Time zoneUTC 8 CST DST is not observedDate formatyyyy mm ddor yyyy年 m月 d日 CE Chinese calendar Driving sideright Mainland left Hong Kong and Macau Calling code 86 Mainland 852 Hong Kong 853 Macau ISO 3166 codeCNInternet TLD cn 中国 中國 Mainland hk 香港 Hong Kong mo 澳门 澳門 Macau Modern Chinese trace their origins to a cradle of civilization in the fertile basin of the Yellow River in the North China Plain The semi legendary Xia dynasty in the 21st century BCE and the well attested Shang and Zhou dynasties developed a bureaucratic political system to serve hereditary monarchies or dynasties Chinese writing Chinese classic literature and the Hundred Schools of Thought emerged during this period and influenced China and its neighbors for centuries to come In the third century BCE Qin s wars of unification created the first Chinese empire the short lived Qin dynasty The Qin was followed by the more stable Han dynasty 206 BCE 220 CE which established a model for nearly two millennia in which the Chinese empire was one of the world s foremost economic powers The empire expanded fractured and re unified was conquered and reestablished absorbed foreign religions and ideas and made world leading scientific advances such as the Four Great Inventions gunpowder paper the compass and printing After centuries of disunion following the fall of the Han the Sui 581 618 and Tang 618 907 dynasties reunified the empire The multi ethnic Tang welcomed foreign trade and culture that came over the Silk Road and adapted Buddhism to Chinese needs The early modern Song dynasty 960 1279 became increasingly urban and commercial The civilian scholar official or literati used the examination system and the doctrines of Neo Confucianism to replace the military aristocrats of earlier dynasties The Mongol invasion established the Yuan dynasty in 1279 but the Ming dynasty 1368 1644 re established Han Chinese control The Manchu led Qing dynasty nearly doubled the empire s territory and established a multi ethnic state that was the basis of the modern Chinese nation but suffered heavy losses to foreign imperialism in the 19th century The Chinese monarchy collapsed in 1912 with the Xinhai Revolution when the Republic of China ROC replaced the Qing dynasty In its early years as a republic the country underwent a period of instability known as the Warlord Era before mostly reunifying in 1928 under a Nationalist government A civil war between the nationalist Kuomintang KMT and the Chinese Communist Party CCP began in 1927 Japan invaded China in 1937 starting the Second Sino Japanese War and temporarily halting the civil war The surrender and expulsion of Japanese forces from China in 1945 left a power vacuum in the country which led to renewed fighting between the CCP and the Kuomintang The civil war ended in 1949 o with the division of Chinese territory the CCP established the People s Republic of China on the mainland while the Kuomintang led ROC government retreated to the island of Taiwan p Both claim to be the sole legitimate government of China although the United Nations has recognized the PRC as the sole representation since 1971 From 1959 to 1961 the PRC implemented an economic and social campaign called the Great Leap Forward that resulted in a sharp economic decline and an estimated 15 to 55 million deaths mostly through man made famine From 1966 to 1976 the turbulent period of political and social chaos within China known as the Cultural Revolution led to greater economic and educational decline with millions being purged or subjected to either persecution or politicide based on political categories Since then the Chinese government has rebuked some of the earlier Maoist policies conducting a series of political and economic reforms since 1978 which has greatly raised Chinese standards of living and increased life expectancies China is currently governed as a unitary Marxist Leninist one party socialist republic by the CCP China is a permanent member of the United Nations Security Council and a founding member of several multilateral and regional cooperation organizations such as the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank the Silk Road Fund the New Development Bank the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation and the RCEP and is a member of the BRICS the G8 5 the G20 the APEC and the East Asia Summit It ranks among the lowest in measurements of democracy civil liberties government transparency freedom of the press freedom of religion and human rights of ethnic minorities The Chinese authorities have been criticized by human rights activists and non governmental organizations for human rights abuses including political repression mass censorship mass surveillance of their citizens and violent suppression of protest and dissent Making up around one fifth of the world economy China is the world s largest economy by GDP by purchasing power parity the second largest economy by nominal GDP and the second wealthiest country The country is one of the fastest growing major economies and is the world s largest manufacturer and exporter as well as the second largest importer China is a recognized nuclear weapon state with the world s largest standing army by military personnel and second largest defense budget China is considered to be a potential superpower due to its large markets high innovation economic potential growing military strength and influence in international affairs Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Prehistory 2 2 Early dynastic rule 2 3 Imperial China 2 4 Fall of the Qing dynasty 2 5 Establishment of the Republic and World War II 2 6 Civil War and the People s Republic 2 7 Reforms and contemporary history 3 Geography 3 1 Climate 3 2 Biodiversity 3 3 Environment 3 4 Political geography 4 Politics 4 1 Chinese Communist Party 4 2 Government 4 3 Administrative divisions 4 4 Foreign relations 4 4 1 Trade relations 4 4 2 Territorial disputes 4 4 2 1 Taiwan 4 4 2 2 Land border disputes 4 4 2 3 Maritime border disputes 4 5 Sociopolitical issues and human rights 4 6 Military 5 Economy 5 1 Wealth 5 2 China in the global economy 6 Science and technology 6 1 Historical 6 2 Modern era 6 2 1 Space program 7 Infrastructure 7 1 Telecommunications 7 2 Transport 7 3 Water supply and sanitation 8 Demographics 8 1 Ethnic groups 8 2 Languages 8 3 Urbanization 8 4 Education 8 5 Health 8 6 Religion 9 Culture 9 1 Tourism 9 2 Literature 9 3 Cuisine 9 4 Music 9 5 Cinema 9 6 Fashion 9 7 Sports 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External links 14 1 Government 14 2 General information 14 3 MapsEtymologyMain article Names of China China today s Guangdong Mangi inland of Xanton and Cataio inland of China and Chequan and including the capital Cambalu Xandu and a marble bridge are all shown as separate regions on this 1570 map by Abraham Ortelius The word China has been used in English since the 16th century however it was not a word used by the Chinese themselves during this period Its origin has been traced through Portuguese Malay and Persian back to the Sanskrit word China used in ancient India 18 China appears in Richard Eden s 1555 translation q of the 1516 journal of the Portuguese explorer Duarte Barbosa r 18 Barbosa s usage was derived from Persian Chin چین which was in turn derived from Sanskrit Cina च न 23 Cina was first used in early Hindu scripture including the Mahabharata 5th century BCE and the Laws of Manu 2nd century BCE 24 In 1655 Martino Martini suggested that the word China is derived ultimately from the name of the Qin dynasty 221 206 BCE 25 24 Although usage in Indian sources precedes this dynasty this derivation is still given in various sources 26 The origin of the Sanskrit word is a matter of debate according to the Oxford English Dictionary 18 Alternative suggestions include the names for Yelang and the Jing or Chu state 24 27 The official name of the modern state is the People s Republic of China simplified Chinese 中华人民共和国 traditional Chinese 中華人民共和國 pinyin Zhōnghua Renmin Gongheguo The shorter form is China Zhōngguo 中国 中國 from zhōng central and guo state s a term which developed under the Western Zhou dynasty in reference to its royal demesne t u It was then applied to the area around Luoyi present day Luoyang during the Eastern Zhou and then to China s Central Plain before being used as an occasional synonym for the state under the Qing 29 It was often used as a cultural concept to distinguish the Huaxia people from perceived barbarians 29 The name Zhongguo is also translated as Middle Kingdom in English 32 China PRC is sometimes referred to as the Mainland when distinguishing the ROC from the PRC 33 34 35 36 HistoryMain article History of China For a chronological guide see Timeline of Chinese history Prehistory 10 000 years old pottery Xianren Cave culture 18000 7000 BCE China is regarded as one of the world s oldest civilisations 37 38 Archaeological evidence suggests that early hominids inhabited the country 2 25 million years ago 39 The hominid fossils of Peking Man a Homo erectus who used fire 40 were discovered in a cave at Zhoukoudian near Beijing they have been dated to between 680 000 and 780 000 years ago 41 The fossilized teeth of Homo sapiens dated to 125 000 80 000 years ago have been discovered in Fuyan Cave in Dao County Hunan 42 Chinese proto writing existed in Jiahu around 6600 BCE 43 at Damaidi around 6000 BCE 44 Dadiwan from 5800 to 5400 BCE and Banpo dating from the 5th millennium BCE Some scholars have suggested that the Jiahu symbols 7th millennium BCE constituted the earliest Chinese writing system 43 Early dynastic rule Further information Three Sovereigns and Five Emperors Xia dynasty Shang dynasty Zhou dynasty Spring and Autumn period and Warring States period Yinxu the ruins of the capital of the late Shang dynasty 14th century BCE According to Chinese tradition the first dynasty was the Xia which emerged around 2100 BCE 45 The Xia dynasty marked the beginning of China s political system based on hereditary monarchies or dynasties which lasted for a millennium 46 The Xia dynasty was considered mythical by historians until scientific excavations found early Bronze Age sites at Erlitou Henan in 1959 47 It remains unclear whether these sites are the remains of the Xia dynasty or of another culture from the same period 48 The succeeding Shang dynasty is the earliest to be confirmed by contemporary records 49 The Shang ruled the plain of the Yellow River in eastern China from the 17th to the 11th century BCE 50 Their oracle bone script from c 1500 BCE 51 52 represents the oldest form of Chinese writing yet found 53 and is a direct ancestor of modern Chinese characters 54 The Shang was conquered by the Zhou who ruled between the 11th and 5th centuries BCE though centralized authority was slowly eroded by feudal warlords Some principalities eventually emerged from the weakened Zhou no longer fully obeyed the Zhou king and continually waged war with each other during the 300 year Spring and Autumn period By the time of the Warring States period of the 5th 3rd centuries BCE there were only seven powerful states left 55 Imperial China China s first emperor Qin Shi Huang is famed for having united the Warring States walls to form the Great Wall of China Most of the present structure however dates to the Ming dynasty The Warring States period ended in 221 BCE after the state of Qin conquered the other six kingdoms reunited China and established the dominant order of autocracy King Zheng of Qin proclaimed himself the First Emperor of the Qin dynasty He enacted Qin s legalist reforms throughout China notably the forced standardization of Chinese characters measurements road widths i e the cart axles length and currency His dynasty also conquered the Yue tribes in Guangxi Guangdong and Vietnam 56 The Qin dynasty lasted only fifteen years falling soon after the First Emperor s death as his harsh authoritarian policies led to widespread rebellion 57 58 Following a widespread civil war during which the imperial library at Xianyang was burned v the Han dynasty emerged to rule China between 206 BCE and CE 220 creating a cultural identity among its populace still remembered in the ethnonym of the Han Chinese 57 58 The Han expanded the empire s territory considerably with military campaigns reaching Central Asia Mongolia South Korea and Yunnan and the recovery of Guangdong and northern Vietnam from Nanyue Han involvement in Central Asia and Sogdia helped establish the land route of the Silk Road replacing the earlier path over the Himalayas to India Han China gradually became the largest economy of the ancient world 60 Despite the Han s initial decentralization and the official abandonment of the Qin philosophy of Legalism in favor of Confucianism Qin s legalist institutions and policies continued to be employed by the Han government and its successors 61 Map showing the expansion of Han dynasty in the 2nd century BC After the end of the Han dynasty a period of strife known as Three Kingdoms followed 62 whose central figures were later immortalized in one of the Four Classics of Chinese literature At its end Wei was swiftly overthrown by the Jin dynasty The Jin fell to civil war upon the ascension of a developmentally disabled emperor the Five Barbarians then invaded and ruled northern China as the Sixteen States The Xianbei unified them as the Northern Wei whose Emperor Xiaowen reversed his predecessors apartheid policies and enforced a drastic sinification on his subjects largely integrating them into Chinese culture In the south the general Liu Yu secured the abdication of the Jin in favor of the Liu Song The various successors of these states became known as the Northern and Southern dynasties with the two areas finally reunited by the Sui in 581 The Sui restored the Han to power through China reformed its agriculture economy and imperial examination system constructed the Grand Canal and patronized Buddhism However they fell quickly when their conscription for public works and a failed war in northern Korea provoked widespread unrest 63 64 Under the succeeding Tang and Song dynasties Chinese economy technology and culture entered a golden age 65 The Tang dynasty retained control of the Western Regions and the Silk Road 66 which brought traders to as far as Mesopotamia and the Horn of Africa 67 and made the capital Chang an a cosmopolitan urban center However it was devastated and weakened by the An Lushan Rebellion in the 8th century 68 In 907 the Tang disintegrated completely when the local military governors became ungovernable The Song dynasty ended the separatist situation in 960 leading to a balance of power between the Song and Khitan Liao The Song was the first government in world history to issue paper money and the first Chinese polity to establish a permanent standing navy which was supported by the developed shipbuilding industry along with the sea trade 69 The Tang dynasty at its greatest extent and Tang s protectorates A detail from Along the River During the Qingming Festival a 12th century painting showing everyday life in the Song dynasty s capital Bianjing present day Kaifeng Between the 10th and 11th centuries the population of China doubled in size to around 100 million people mostly because of the expansion of rice cultivation in central and southern China and the production of abundant food surpluses The Song dynasty also saw a revival of Confucianism in response to the growth of Buddhism during the Tang 70 and a flourishing of philosophy and the arts as landscape art and porcelain were brought to new levels of maturity and complexity 71 72 However the military weakness of the Song army was observed by the Jurchen Jin dynasty In 1127 Emperor Huizong of Song and the capital Bianjing were captured during the Jin Song Wars The remnants of the Song retreated to southern China 73 The Mongol conquest of China began in 1205 with the gradual conquest of Western Xia by Genghis Khan 74 who also invaded Jin territories 75 In 1271 the Mongol leader Kublai Khan established the Yuan dynasty which conquered the last remnant of the Song dynasty in 1279 Before the Mongol invasion the population of Song China was 120 million citizens this was reduced to 60 million by the time of the census in 1300 76 A peasant named Zhu Yuanzhang led a rebellion that overthrew the Yuan in 1368 and founded the Ming dynasty as the Hongwu Emperor Under the Ming dynasty China enjoyed another golden age developing one of the strongest navies in the world and a rich and prosperous economy amid a flourishing of art and culture It was during this period that admiral Zheng He led the Ming treasure voyages throughout the Indian Ocean reaching as far as East Africa 77 The Qing conquest of the Ming and expansion of the empire In the early years of the Ming dynasty China s capital was moved from Nanjing to Beijing With the budding of capitalism philosophers such as Wang Yangming further critiqued and expanded Neo Confucianism with concepts of individualism and equality of four occupations 78 The scholar official stratum became a supporting force of industry and commerce in the tax boycott movements which together with the famines and defense against Japanese invasions of Korea 1592 1598 and Manchu invasions led to an exhausted treasury 79 In 1644 Beijing was captured by a coalition of peasant rebel forces led by Li Zicheng The Chongzhen Emperor committed suicide when the city fell The Manchu Qing dynasty then allied with Ming dynasty general Wu Sangui overthrew Li s short lived Shun dynasty and subsequently seized control of Beijing which became the new capital of the Qing dynasty 80 The Qing dynasty which lasted from 1644 until 1912 was the last imperial dynasty of China Its conquest of the Ming 1618 1683 cost 25 million lives and the economy of China shrank drastically 81 After the Southern Ming ended the further conquest of the Dzungar Khanate added Mongolia Tibet and Xinjiang to the empire 82 The centralized autocracy was strengthened to suppress anti Qing sentiment with the policy of valuing agriculture and restraining commerce the Haijin sea ban and ideological control as represented by the literary inquisition causing social and technological stagnation 83 84 Fall of the Qing dynasty Further information Century of humiliation Opium Wars First Sino Japanese War and Boxer Rebellion The Eight Nation Alliance invaded China to defeat the anti foreign Boxers and their Qing backers The image shows a celebration ceremony inside the Chinese imperial palace the Forbidden City after the signing of the Boxer Protocol in 1901 In the mid 19th century the Qing dynasty experienced Western imperialism in the Opium Wars with Britain and France China was forced to pay compensation open treaty ports allow extraterritoriality for foreign nationals and cede Hong Kong to the British 85 under the 1842 Treaty of Nanking the first of the Unequal Treaties The First Sino Japanese War 1894 1895 resulted in Qing China s loss of influence in the Korean Peninsula as well as the cession of Taiwan to Japan 86 The Qing dynasty also began experiencing internal unrest in which tens of millions of people died especially in the White Lotus Rebellion the failed Taiping Rebellion that ravaged southern China in the 1850s and 1860s and the Dungan Revolt 1862 1877 in the northwest The initial success of the Self Strengthening Movement of the 1860s was frustrated by a series of military defeats in the 1880s and 1890s citation needed In the 19th century the great Chinese diaspora began Losses due to emigration were added to by conflicts and catastrophes such as the Northern Chinese Famine of 1876 1879 in which between 9 and 13 million people died 87 The Guangxu Emperor drafted a reform plan in 1898 to establish a modern constitutional monarchy but these plans were thwarted by the Empress Dowager Cixi The ill fated anti foreign Boxer Rebellion of 1899 1901 further weakened the dynasty Although Cixi sponsored a program of reforms the Xinhai Revolution of 1911 1912 brought an end to the Qing dynasty and established the Republic of China 88 Puyi the last Emperor of China abdicated in 1912 89 Establishment of the Republic and World War II Main article Republic of China 1912 1949 Further information 1911 Revolution Second Sino Japanese War Chinese Civil War and Chinese Communist Revolution Sun Yat sen the founding father of Republic of China one of the first republics in Asia On 1 January 1912 the Republic of China was established and Sun Yat sen of the Kuomintang the KMT or Nationalist Party was proclaimed provisional president 90 On 12 February 1912 regent Empress Dowager Longyu sealed the imperial abdication decree on behalf of 4 year old Puyi the last emperor of China ending 5 000 years of monarchy in China 91 In March 1912 the presidency was given to Yuan Shikai a former Qing general who in 1915 proclaimed himself Emperor of China In the face of popular condemnation and opposition from his own Beiyang Army he was forced to abdicate and re establish the republic in 1916 92 After Yuan Shikai s death in 1916 China was politically fragmented Its Beijing based government was internationally recognized but virtually powerless regional warlords controlled most of its territory 93 94 In the late 1920s the Kuomintang under Chiang Kai shek the then Principal of the Republic of China Military Academy was able to reunify the country under its own control with a series of deft military and political maneuverings known collectively as the Northern Expedition 95 96 The Kuomintang moved the nation s capital to Nanjing and implemented political tutelage an intermediate stage of political development outlined in Sun Yat sen s San min program for transforming China into a modern democratic state 97 98 The political division in China made it difficult for Chiang to battle the communist led People s Liberation Army PLA against whom the Kuomintang had been warring since 1927 in the Chinese Civil War This war continued successfully for the Kuomintang especially after the PLA retreated in the Long March until Japanese aggression and the 1936 Xi an Incident forced Chiang to confront Imperial Japan 99 Chiang Kai shek and Mao Zedong toasting together in 1945 following the end of World War II The Second Sino Japanese War 1937 1945 a theater of World War II forced an uneasy alliance between the Kuomintang and the Communists Japanese forces committed numerous war atrocities against the civilian population in all as many as 20 million Chinese civilians died 100 An estimated 40 000 to 300 000 Chinese were massacred in the city of Nanjing alone during the Japanese occupation 101 During the war China along with the UK the United States and the Soviet Union were referred to as trusteeship of the powerful 102 and were recognized as the Allied Big Four in the Declaration by United Nations 103 104 Along with the other three great powers China was one of the four major Allies of World War II and was later considered one of the primary victors in the war 105 106 After the surrender of Japan in 1945 Taiwan including the Pescadores was handed over to Chinese control However the validity of this handover is controversial in that whether Taiwan s sovereignty was legally transferred and whether China is a legitimate recipient due to complex issues that arose from the handling of Japan s surrender resulting in the unresolved political status of Taiwan which is a flashpoint of potential war between China and Taiwan China emerged victorious but war ravaged and financially drained The continued distrust between the Kuomintang and the Communists led to the resumption of civil war Constitutional rule was established in 1947 but because of the ongoing unrest many provisions of the ROC constitution were never implemented in mainland China 107 Civil War and the People s Republic Main article History of the People s Republic of China Further information Chinese Soviet Republic Proclamation of the People s Republic of China Retreat of the government of the Republic of China to Taiwan Taiwan China and Cultural Revolution Before the existence of the People s Republic the CCP had declared several areas of the country as the Chinese Soviet Republic Jiangxi Soviet a predecessor state to the PRC in November 1931 in Ruijin Jiangxi The Jiangxi Soviet was wiped out by the KMT armies in 1934 and was relocated to Yan an in Shaanxi where the Long March concluded in 1935 108 failed verification It would be the base of the communists before major combat in the Chinese Civil War ended in 1949 Afterwards the CCP took control of most of mainland China and the Kuomintang retreating offshore to Taiwan reducing its territory to only Taiwan Hainan and their surrounding islands On 1 October 1949 CCP Chairman Mao Zedong formally proclaimed the establishment of the People s Republic of China at the new nation s founding ceremony and inaugural military parade in Tiananmen Square Beijing 109 110 In 1950 the People s Liberation Army captured Hainan from the ROC 111 and annexed Tibet 112 However remaining Kuomintang forces continued to wage an insurgency in western China throughout the 1950s 113 The government consolidated its popularity among the peasants through land reform which included the execution of between 1 and 2 million landlords 114 China developed an independent industrial system and its own nuclear weapons 115 The Chinese population increased from 550 million in 1950 to 900 million in 1974 116 However the Great Leap Forward an idealistic massive reform project resulted in an estimated 15 to 55 million deaths between 1959 and 1961 mostly from starvation 117 118 In 1966 Mao and his allies launched the Cultural Revolution sparking a decade of political recrimination and social upheaval that lasted until Mao s death in 1976 In October 1971 the PRC replaced the Republic of China in the United Nations and took its seat as a permanent member of the Security Council 119 This UN action also created the problem of the political status of Taiwan and the Two Chinas issue See Cross Strait relations and Taiwan China Reforms and contemporary history Further information Chinese economic reform The 1989 Tiananmen Square protests was ended by a military led massacre which brought condemnations and sanctions against the Chinese government from various foreign countries After Mao s death the Gang of Four was quickly arrested by Hua Guofeng and held responsible for the excesses of the Cultural Revolution Deng Xiaoping took power in 1978 and instituted significant economic reforms The CCP loosened governmental control over citizens personal lives and the communes were gradually disbanded in favor of working contracted to households Agricultural collectivization was dismantled and farmlands privatized while foreign trade became a major new focus leading to the creation of Special Economic Zones SEZs Inefficient state owned enterprises SOEs were restructured and unprofitable ones were closed outright resulting in massive job losses citation needed This marked China s transition from a planned economy to a mixed economy with an increasingly open market environment 120 China adopted its current constitution on 4 December 1982 In 1989 the suppression of student protests in Tiananmen Square brought condemnations and sanctions against the Chinese government from various foreign countries 121 Jiang Zemin Li Peng and Zhu Rongji led the nation in the 1990s Under their administration China s economic performance pulled an estimated by whom 150 million peasants out of poverty and sustained an average annual gross domestic product growth rate of 11 2 122 better source needed British Hong Kong and Portuguese Macau returned to China in 1997 and 1999 respectively as the Hong Kong and Macau special administrative regions under the principle of One country two systems The country joined the World Trade Organization in 2001 and maintained its high rate of economic growth under Hu Jintao and Wen Jiabao s leadership in the 2000s However the growth also severely impacted the country s resources and environment 123 124 and caused major social displacement 125 126 CCP general secretary Xi Jinping has ruled since 2012 and has pursued large scale efforts to reform China s economy 127 128 which has suffered from structural instabilities and slowing growth 129 130 131 and has also reformed the one child policy and penal system 132 as well as instituting a vast anti corruption crackdown 133 In the early 2010s China s economic growth rate began to slow amid domestic credit troubles weakening international demand for Chinese exports and fragility in the global economy 134 135 136 In 2013 China initiated the Belt and Road Initiative a global infrastructure investment project 137 Since 2017 the Chinese government has been engaged in a harsh crackdown in Xinjiang with an estimated one million people mostly Uyghurs but including other ethnic and religious minorities in internment camps 138 The National People s Congress in 2018 altered the country s constitution to remove the two term limit on holding the Presidency of China permitting the current leader Xi Jinping to remain president of China and general secretary of the CCP for an unlimited time earning criticism for creating dictatorial governance 139 140 In 2020 the Standing Committee of the National People s Congress NPCSC passed a national security law in Hong Kong that gave the Hong Kong government wide ranging tools to crack down on dissent 141 The global COVID 19 pandemic originated in Wuhan and was first identified from an outbreak in December 2019 142 The Chinese government response has included a zero COVID strategy making it one of few countries to pursue this approach 143 China was the only major economy in the world to grow in 2020 recording a 2 3 growth due to its success in containing the coronavirus within its borders 144 The country s economy continued to broaden recovery from the recession during the pandemic with stable job creation and record international trade growth although retail consumption was still slower than predicted 145 146 These Zero COVID strategies have led to a variety of protests across China against them starting in November 2022 GeographyMain article Geography of China China topographic map with East Asia countries China s landscape is vast and diverse ranging from the Gobi and Taklamakan Deserts in the arid north to the subtropical forests in the wetter south The Himalaya Karakoram Pamir and Tian Shan mountain ranges separate China from much of South and Central Asia The Yangtze and Yellow Rivers the third and sixth longest in the world respectively run from the Tibetan Plateau to the densely populated eastern seaboard China s coastline along the Pacific Ocean is 14 500 km 9 000 mi long and is bounded by the Bohai Yellow East China and South China seas China connects through the Kazakh border to the Eurasian Steppe which has been an artery of communication between East and West since the Neolithic through the Steppe Route the ancestor of the terrestrial Silk Road s citation needed The territory of China lies between latitudes 18 and 54 N and longitudes 73 and 135 E The geographical center of China is marked by the Center of the Country Monument at 35 50 40 9 N 103 27 7 5 E 35 844694 N 103 452083 E 35 844694 103 452083 Geographical center of China China s landscapes vary significantly across its vast territory In the east along the shores of the Yellow Sea and the East China Sea there are extensive and densely populated alluvial plains while on the edges of the Inner Mongolian plateau in the north broad grasslands predominate Southern China is dominated by hills and low mountain ranges while the central east hosts the deltas of China s two major rivers the Yellow River and the Yangtze River Other major rivers include the Xi Mekong Brahmaputra and Amur To the west sit major mountain ranges most notably the Himalayas High plateaus feature among the more arid landscapes of the north such as the Taklamakan and the Gobi Desert The world s highest point Mount Everest 8 848 m lies on the Sino Nepalese border 147 The country s lowest point and the world s third lowest is the dried lake bed of Ayding Lake 154 m in the Turpan Depression 148 Climate Main article Climate of China Further information Great Green Wall China Koppen Geiger climate classification map for mainland China 149 China s climate is mainly dominated by dry seasons and wet monsoons which lead to pronounced temperature differences between winter and summer In the winter northern winds coming from high latitude areas are cold and dry in summer southern winds from coastal areas at lower latitudes are warm and moist 150 A major environmental issue in China is the continued expansion of its deserts particularly the Gobi Desert 151 152 Although barrier tree lines planted since the 1970s have reduced the frequency of sandstorms prolonged drought and poor agricultural practices have resulted in dust storms plaguing northern China each spring which then spread to other parts of East Asia including Japan and Korea China s environmental watchdog SEPA stated in 2007 that China is losing 4 000 km2 1 500 sq mi per year to desertification 153 Water quality erosion and pollution control have become important issues in China s relations with other countries Melting glaciers in the Himalayas could potentially lead to water shortages for hundreds of millions of people 154 According to academics in order to limit climate change in China to 1 5 C 2 7 F electricity generation from coal in China without carbon capture must be phased out by 2045 155 Official government statistics about Chinese agricultural productivity are considered unreliable due to exaggeration of production at subsidiary government levels 156 157 Much of China has a climate very suitable for agriculture and the country has been the world s largest producer of rice wheat tomatoes eggplant grapes watermelon spinach and many other crops 158 Biodiversity Main article Wildlife of China A giant panda China s most famous endangered and endemic species at the Chengdu Research Base of Giant Panda Breeding in Sichuan China is one of 17 megadiverse countries 159 lying in two of the world s major biogeographic realms the Palearctic and the Indomalayan By one measure China has over 34 687 species of animals and vascular plants making it the third most biodiverse country in the world after Brazil and Colombia 160 The country signed the Rio de Janeiro Convention on Biological Diversity on 11 June 1992 and became a party to the convention on 5 January 1993 161 It later produced a National Biodiversity Strategy and Action Plan with one revision that was received by the convention on 21 September 2010 162 China is home to at least 551 species of mammals the third highest such number in the world 163 1 221 species of birds eighth 164 424 species of reptiles seventh 165 and 333 species of amphibians seventh 166 Wildlife in China shares habitat with and bears acute pressure from the world s largest population of humans At least 840 animal species are threatened vulnerable or in danger of local extinction in China due mainly to human activity such as habitat destruction pollution and poaching for food fur and ingredients for traditional Chinese medicine 167 Endangered wildlife is protected by law and as of 2005 update the country has over 2 349 nature reserves covering a total area of 149 95 million hectares 15 percent of China s total land area 168 better source needed Most wild animals have been eliminated from the core agricultural regions of east and central China but they have fared better in the mountainous south and west 169 170 The Baiji was confirmed extinct on 12 December 2006 171 China has over 32 000 species of vascular plants 172 and is home to a variety of forest types Cold coniferous forests predominate in the north of the country supporting animal species such as moose and Asian black bear along with over 120 bird species 173 The understory of moist conifer forests may contain thickets of bamboo In higher montane stands of juniper and yew the bamboo is replaced by rhododendrons Subtropical forests which are predominate in central and southern China support a high density of plant species including numerous rare endemics Tropical and seasonal rainforests though confined to Yunnan and Hainan Island contain a quarter of all the animal and plant species found in China 173 China has over 10 000 recorded species of fungi 174 and of them nearly 6 000 are higher fungi 175 Environment Main articles Environment of China and Environmental issues in China See also Renewable energy in China Water resources of China Energy policy of China and Climate change in China The Three Gorges Dam is the largest hydroelectric dam in the world In the early 2000s China has suffered from environmental deterioration and pollution due to its rapid pace of industrialization 176 177 While regulations such as the 1979 Environmental Protection Law are fairly stringent they are poorly enforced as they are frequently disregarded by local communities and government officials in favor of rapid economic development 178 China is the country with the second highest death toll because of air pollution after India There are approximately 1 million deaths caused by exposure to ambient air pollution 179 180 Although China ranks as the highest CO2 emitting country in the world 181 it only emits 8 tons of CO2 per capita significantly lower than developed countries such as the United States 16 1 Australia 16 8 and South Korea 13 6 182 In recent years China has clamped down on pollution In March 2014 CCP General Secretary Xi Jinping declared war on pollution during the opening of the National People s Congress 183 After extensive debate lasting nearly two years the parliament approved a new environmental law in April The new law empowers environmental enforcement agencies with great punitive power and large fines for offenders defines areas which require extra protection and gives independent environmental groups more ability to operate in the country citation needed In 2020 Chinese Communist Party general secretary Xi Jinping announced that China aims to peak emissions before 2030 and go carbon neutral by 2060 in accordance with the Paris climate accord 184 According to Climate Action Tracker if accomplished it would lower the expected rise in global temperature by 0 2 0 3 degrees the biggest single reduction ever estimated by the Climate Action Tracker 185 In September 2021 Xi Jinping announced that China will not build coal fired power projects abroad The decision can be pivotal in reducing emissions The Belt and Road Initiative did not include financing such projects already in the first half of 2021 186 The country also had significant water pollution problems 8 2 of China s rivers had been polluted by industrial and agricultural waste in 2019 187 188 China had a 2018 Forest Landscape Integrity Index mean score of 7 14 10 ranking it 53rd globally out of 172 countries 189 In 2020 a sweeping law was passed by the Chinese government to protect the ecology of the Yangtze River The new laws include strengthening ecological protection rules for hydropower projects along the river banning chemical plants within 1 kilometer of the river relocating polluting industries severely restricting sand mining as well as a complete fishing ban on all the natural waterways of the river including all its major tributaries and lakes 190 China is also the world s leading investor in renewable energy and its commercialization with 52 billion invested in 2011 alone 191 192 193 it is a major manufacturer of renewable energy technologies and invests heavily in local scale renewable energy projects 194 195 196 By 2015 over 24 of China s energy was derived from renewable sources while most notably from hydroelectric power a total installed capacity of 197 GW makes China the largest hydroelectric power producer in the world 197 198 China also has the largest power capacity of installed solar photovoltaics system and wind power system in the world 199 200 Greenhouse gas emissions by China are the world s largest 182 as is renewable energy in China 201 Despite its emphasis on renewables China remains deeply connected to global oil markets and next to India has been the largest importer of Russian crude oil in 2022 202 203 Political geography Main articles Borders of China Coastline of China and Territorial changes of the People s Republic of China Map showing the territorial claims of the PRC The People s Republic of China is the second largest country in the world by land area after Russia w x China s total area is generally stated as being approximately 9 600 000 km2 3 700 000 sq mi 204 Specific area figures range from 9 572 900 km2 3 696 100 sq mi according to the Encyclopaedia Britannica 205 to 9 596 961 km2 3 705 407 sq mi according to the UN Demographic Yearbook 3 and the CIA World Factbook 6 China has the longest combined land border in the world measuring 22 117 km 13 743 mi and its coastline covers approximately 14 500 km 9 000 mi from the mouth of the Yalu River Amnok River to the Gulf of Tonkin 6 China borders 14 nations and covers the bulk of East Asia bordering Vietnam Laos and Myanmar in Southeast Asia India Bhutan Nepal Afghanistan and Pakistan y in South Asia Tajikistan Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan in Central Asia and Russia Mongolia and North Korea in Inner Asia and Northeast Asia It is narrowly separated from Bangladesh and Thailand to the southwest and south and has several maritime neighbors such as Japan Philippines Malaysia and Indonesia 206 PoliticsMain article Politics of ChinaSee also List of current Chinese provincial leaders The Great Hall of the Peoplewhere the National People s Congress convenes The Zhongnanhai headquarters of the Chinese government and Chinese Communist Party The Chinese constitution states that the People s Republic of China is a socialist state governed by a people s democratic dictatorship that is led by the working class and based on an alliance of workers and peasants and that the state institutions shall practice the principle of democratic centralism 207 The PRC is one of the world s only socialist states governed by a communist party The Chinese government has been variously described as communist and socialist but also as authoritarian 208 and corporatist 209 with amongst the heaviest restrictions worldwide in many areas most notably against free access to the Internet freedom of the press freedom of assembly the right to have children free formation of social organizations and freedom of religion 210 Although the Chinese Communist Party describes China as a socialist consultative democracy 211 the country is commonly described as an authoritarian one party surveillance state and a dictatorship 212 213 China has consistently been ranked amongst the lowest as an authoritarian regime by the Economist Intelligence Unit s Democracy Index ranking at 148th out of 167 countries in 2021 214 Its current political ideological and economic system has been termed by its leaders as a whole process people s democracy people s democratic dictatorship socialism with Chinese characteristics which is Marxism adapted to Chinese circumstances and the socialist market economy respectively 215 216 Political concerns in China include the growing gap between rich and poor and government corruption 217 Nonetheless the level of public support for the government and its management of the nation is high with 80 95 of Chinese citizens expressing satisfaction with the central government according to a 2011 Harvard University survey 218 A 2020 survey from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research also had most Chinese expressing satisfaction with the government on information dissemination and delivery of daily necessities during the COVID 19 pandemic 219 220 A Harvard University survey published in July 2020 found that citizen satisfaction with the government had increased since 2003 also rating China s government as more effective and capable than ever before in the survey s history 221 Chinese Communist Party Main article Chinese Communist Party The Chinese Communist Party is the founding and ruling political party of the People s Republic of China The main body of the Chinese constitution declares that the defining feature of socialism with Chinese characteristics is the leadership of the Chinese Communist Party CCP 222 China is a one party Marxist Leninist state 223 wherein the CCP general secretary party leader holds ultimate power and authority over state and government and serves as the informal paramount leader 224 The current general secretary is Xi Jinping who took office on 15 November 2012 and was re elected on 25 October 2017 225 According to the CCP constitution its highest body is the National Congress held every five years 226 The National Congress elects the Central Committee who then elects the party s Politburo Politburo Standing Committee and general secretary the top leadership of the country 226 At the local level the secretary of the CCP committee of a subdivision outranks the local government level CCP committee secretary of a provincial division outranks the governor while the CCP committee secretary of a city outranks the mayor 227 Since both the CCP and the People s Liberation Army PLA promote according to seniority it is possible to discern distinct generations of Chinese leadership 228 In official discourse each group of leadership is identified with a distinct extension of the ideology of the party Historians have studied various periods in the development of the government of the People s Republic of China by reference to these generations Generations of Chinese leadership Generation Paramount Leader Start End IdeologyFirst Mao ZedongHua Guofeng 1949 1978 Mao Zedong ThoughtSecond Deng Xiaoping 1978 1989 Deng Xiaoping TheoryThird Jiang Zemin 1989 2002 Three RepresentsFourth Hu Jintao 2002 2012 Scientific Outlook on DevelopmentFifth Xi Jinping 2012 Xi Jinping ThoughtGovernment Main article Government of China See also List of national leaders of the People s Republic of China Xi JinpingCCP General Secretary and President Li KeqiangPremier Li ZhanshuCongress Chairman The nearly 3 000 member National People s Congress NPC is constitutionally the highest state organ of power 207 though it has been also described as a rubber stamp body 229 The NPC meets annually while the NPC Standing Committee around 150 member body elected from NPC delegates meets every couple of months 229 In what China calls the people s congress system local people s congresses at the lowest level z are officially directly elected with all the higher level people s congresses up to the NPC being elected by the level one below 207 However the elections are not pluralistic with nominations at all levels being controlled by the CCP 230 The NPC is dominated by the CCP with another eight minor parties having nominal representation in the condition of upholding CCP leadership 231 The president is the ceremonial head of state elected by the NPC The incumbent president is Xi Jinping who is also the general secretary of the CCP and the chairman of the Central Military Commission making him China s paramount leader The premier is the head of government with Li Keqiang being the incumbent premier The premier is officially nominated by the president and then elected by the NPC and has generally been either the second or third ranking member of the PSC The premier presides over the State Council China s cabinet composed of four vice premiers and the heads of ministries and commissions 207 The Chinese People s Political Consultative Conference CPPCC is a political advisory body that is critical in China s united front system which aims to gather non CCP voices to support the CCP Similar to the people s congresses CPPCC s exist at various division with the National Committee of the CPPCC being chaired by Wang Yang one of China s top leaders 232 Administrative divisions Main articles Administrative divisions of China Districts of Hong Kong and Municipalities and parishes of Macau The People s Republic of China is constitutionally a unitary state officially divided into 23 provinces n five autonomous regions each with a designated minority group and four municipalities collectively referred to as mainland China as well as the special administrative regions SARs of Hong Kong and Macau 233 The PRC considers Taiwan to be its 23rd province 234 although it is governed by the Republic of China ROC which claims to be the legitimate representative of China and its territory though it has downplayed this claim since its democratization 235 Geographically all 31 provincial divisions of mainland China can be grouped into six regions North China Northeast China East China South Central China Southwest China and Northwest China 236 Provinces 省 Claimed ProvinceAnhui 安徽省 Fujian 福建省 Gansu 甘肃省 Guangdong 广东省 Guizhou 贵州省 Hainan 海南省 Hebei 河北省 Heilongjiang 黑龙江省 Henan 河南省 Hubei 湖北省 Hunan 湖南省 Jiangsu 江苏省 Jiangxi 江西省 Jilin 吉林省 Liaoning 辽宁省 Qinghai 青海省 Shaanxi 陕西省 Shandong 山东省 Shanxi 山西省 Sichuan 四川省 Yunnan 云南省 Zhejiang 浙江省 Taiwan 台湾省 governed by the Republic of ChinaAutonomous regions 自治区 Municipalities 直辖市 Special administrative regions 特别行政区 Guangxi 广西壮族自治区 Inner Mongolia Nei Menggu 内蒙古自治区 Ningxia 宁夏回族自治区 Xinjiang 新疆维吾尔自治区 Tibet Xizang 西藏自治区 Beijing 北京市 Chongqing 重庆市 Shanghai 上海市 Tianjin 天津市 Hong Kong Xianggang 香港特别行政区 Macau Aomen 澳门特别行政区 Foreign relations Main article Foreign relations of China Diplomatic relations of China The PRC has diplomatic relations with 175 countries and maintains embassies in 162 In 2019 China had the largest diplomatic network in the world 237 238 Its legitimacy is disputed by the Republic of China and a few other countries it is thus the largest and most populous state with limited recognition with a population of more than 1 4 billion 239 In 1971 the PRC replaced the Republic of China as the sole representative of China in the United Nations and as one of the five permanent members of the United Nations Security Council 240 China was also a former member and leader of the Non Aligned Movement and still considers itself an advocate for developing countries 241 Along with Brazil Russia India and South Africa China is a member of the BRICS group of emerging major economies and hosted the group s third official summit at Sanya Hainan in April 2011 242 Under the One China principle Beijing has made it a precondition to establishing diplomatic relations that the other country acknowledges its claim to Taiwan and severs official ties with the government of the Republic of China citation needed Chinese officials have protested on numerous occasions when foreign countries have made diplomatic overtures to Taiwan 243 especially in the matter of armament sales 244 Much of current Chinese foreign policy is reportedly based on Premier Zhou Enlai s Five Principles of Peaceful Coexistence and is also driven by the concept of harmony without uniformity which encourages diplomatic relations between states despite ideological differences 245 This policy may have led China to support states that are regarded as dangerous or repressive by Western nations such as Zimbabwe North Korea and Iran 246 China has a close economic and military relationship with Russia 247 and the two states often vote in unison in the United Nations Security Council 248 249 250 Trade relations On 21 May 2014 China and Russia signed a 400 billion gas deal Currently Russia is supplying natural gas to China China became the world s largest trading nation in 2013 as measured by the sum of imports and exports as well as the world s largest commodity importer comprising roughly 45 of maritime s dry bulk market 251 252 By 2016 China was the largest trading partner of 124 other countries 253 China is the largest trading partner for the ASEAN nations with a total trade value of 345 8 billion in 2015 accounting for 15 2 of ASEAN s total trade 254 ASEAN is also China s largest trading partner 255 In 2020 China became the largest trading partner of the European Union for goods with the total value of goods trade reaching nearly 700 billion 256 China along with ASEAN Japan South Korea Australia and New Zealand is a member of the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership the world s largest free trade area covering 30 of the world s population and economic output 257 China became a member of the World Trade Organization WTO in 2001 In 2004 it proposed an entirely new East Asia Summit EAS framework as a forum for regional security issues 258 The EAS which includes ASEAN Plus Three India Australia and New Zealand held its inaugural summit in 2005 259 China has had a long and complex trade relationship with the United States In 2000 the United States Congress approved permanent normal trade relations PNTR with China allowing Chinese exports in at the same low tariffs as goods from most other countries 260 China has a significant trade surplus with the United States its most important export market 261 Economists have argued that the renminbi is undervalued due to currency intervention from the Chinese government giving China an unfair trade advantage 262 In August 2019 the United States Department of the Treasury designated China as a currency manipulator 263 later reversing the decision in January 2020 264 The US and other foreign governments have also alleged that China doesn t respect intellectual property IP rights and steals IP through espionage operations 265 266 with the US Department of Justice saying that 80 of all the prosecutions related to economic espionage it brings were about conduct to benefit the Chinese state 267 Since the turn of the century China has followed a policy of engaging with African nations for trade and bilateral co operation 268 269 270 in 2019 Sino African trade totalled 208 billion having grown 20 times over two decades 271 According to Madison Condon China finances more infrastructure projects in Africa than the World Bank and provides billions of dollars in low interest loans to the continent s emerging economies 272 China maintains extensive and highly diversified trade links with the European Union 256 China has furthermore strengthened its trade ties with major South American economies 273 and is the largest trading partner of Brazil Chile Peru Uruguay Argentina and several others 274 China s Belt and Road Initiative has expanded significantly over the last six years and as of April 2020 includes 138 countries and 30 international organizations In addition to intensifying foreign policy relations the focus here is particularly on building efficient transport routes The focus is particularly on the maritime Silk Road with its connections to East Africa and Europe and there are Chinese investments or related declarations of intent at numerous ports such as Gwadar Kuantan Hambantota Piraeus and Trieste However many of these loans made under the Belt and Road program are unsustainable and China has faced a number of calls for debt relief from debtor nations 275 276 Territorial disputes Main article Territorial disputes of the People s Republic of China See also List of wars involving the People s Republic of China and Cross Strait relations Taiwan Map depicting territorial disputes between the PRC and neighboring states For a larger map see here Ever since its establishment after the Chinese Civil War the PRC has claimed the territories governed by the Republic of China ROC a separate political entity today commonly known as Taiwan as a part of its territory It regards the island of Taiwan as its Taiwan Province Kinmen and Matsu as a part of Fujian Province and islands the ROC controls in the South China Sea as a part of Hainan Province and Guangdong Province These claims are controversial because of the complicated Cross Strait relations with the PRC treating the One China Principle as one of its most important diplomatic principles 277 better source needed Land border disputes Further information Sino Indian border dispute China has resolved its land borders with 12 out of 14 neighboring countries having pursued substantial compromises in most of them 278 279 280 As of 2023 China currently has a disputed land border with India and Bhutan citation needed Maritime border disputes Main articles Territorial disputes in the South China Sea and Senkaku Islands dispute China is additionally involved in maritime disputes with multiple countries over the ownership of several small islands in the East and South China Seas such as Socotra Rock the Senkaku Islands and the entirety of South China Sea Islands 281 282 along with the EEZ disputes over East China Sea Sociopolitical issues and human rights See also Human rights in China Hukou Social welfare in China Elections in China Censorship in China and Uyghur genocide March in memory of Chinese Nobel Peace Prize laureate Liu Xiaobo who died of organ failure while in government custody in 2017 China uses a massive espionage network of cameras facial recognition software sensors and surveillance of personal technology as a means of social control of persons living in the country 283 The Chinese democracy movement social activists and some members of the CCP who believe in the need for social and political reform While economic and social controls have been significantly relaxed in China since the 1970s political freedom is still tightly restricted The Constitution of the People s Republic of China states that the fundamental rights of citizens include freedom of speech freedom of the press the right to a fair trial freedom of religion universal suffrage and property rights However in practice these provisions do not afford significant protection against criminal prosecution by the state 284 285 Although some criticisms of government policies and the ruling CCP are tolerated censorship of political speech and information most notably on the Internet 286 287 are routinely used to prevent collective action 288 A number of foreign governments foreign press agencies and non governmental organizations have criticized China s human rights record alleging widespread civil rights violations such as detention without trial forced abortions 289 forced confessions torture restrictions of fundamental rights 210 290 and excessive use of the death penalty 291 292 The government suppresses popular protests and demonstrations that it considers a potential threat to social stability as was the case with the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests and massacre 293 In Xinjiang China has been accused of committing genocide against Uyghurs and detaining more than one million Uyghurs and other ethnic minorities in camps 294 China is regularly accused of large scale repression and human rights abuses in Tibet and Xinjiang 295 296 297 including violent police crackdowns and religious suppression 298 299 In Xinjiang at least one million Uyghurs and other ethnic and religion minorities have been detained in internment camps officially termed Vocational Education and Training Centers aimed at changing the political thinking of detainees their identities and their religious beliefs 138 According to the U S Department of State actions including political indoctrination torture physical and psychological abuse forced sterilization sexual abuse and forced labor are common in these facilities 300 The state has also sought to control offshore reporting of tensions in Xinjiang intimidating foreign based reporters by detaining their family members 301 According to a 2020 report China s treatment of Uyghurs meets the UN definition of genocide 302 and several groups called for a UN investigation 303 Several countries have recognized China s actions in Xinjiang as a genocide 304 294 305 2019 20 Hong Kong protests Global studies from Pew Research Center in 2014 and 2017 ranked the Chinese government s restrictions on religion as among the highest in the world despite low to moderate rankings for religious related social hostilities in the country 306 307 The Global Slavery Index estimated that in 2016 more than 3 8 million people were living in conditions of modern slavery or 0 25 of the population including victims of human trafficking forced labor forced marriage child labor and state imposed forced labor The state imposed forced system was formally abolished in 2013 but it is not clear to which extent its various practices have stopped 308 The Chinese penal system includes labor prison factories detention centers and re education camps collectively known as laogai reform through labor The Laogai Research Foundation in the United States estimated that there were over a thousand slave labor prisons and camps in China 309 In 2019 a study called for the mass retraction of more than 400 scientific papers on organ transplantation because of fears the organs were obtained unethically from Chinese prisoners While the government says 10 000 transplants occur each year a report by the Falun Gong linked IETAC alleged that between 60 000 and 100 000 organs are transplanted each year and claimed that this gap was being made up by executed prisoners of conscience 310 Military Main articles People s Liberation Army and Paramilitary forces of China Chengdu J 20 5th generation stealth fighter The People s Liberation Army PLA is considered one of the world s most powerful militaries and has rapidly modernized in the recent decades 311 It consists of the Ground Force PLAGF the Navy PLAN the Air Force PLAAF the Rocket Force PLARF and the Strategic Support Force PLASSF Its nearly 2 2 million active duty personnel is the largest in the world The PLA holds the world s third largest stockpile of nuclear weapons 312 313 and the world s second largest navy by tonnage 314 China s official military budget for 2022 totalled US 230 billion 1 45 trillion Yuan the second largest in the world According to SIPRI estimates its military spending from 2012 to 2021 averaged US 215 billion per year or 1 7 per cent of GDP behind only the United States at US 734 billion per year or 3 6 per cent of GDP 315 The PLA is commanded by the Central Military Commission CMC of the party and the state though officially two separate organizations the two CMCs have identical membership except during leadership transition periods and effectively function as one organization The chairman of the CMC is the commander in chief of the PLA with the officeholder also generally being the CCP general secretary making them the paramount leader of China 316 EconomyMain article Economy of China For Economic history of China see Economic history of China before 1912 Economic history of China 1912 1949 and Economic history of China 1949 present China and other major developing economies by GDP per capita at purchasing power parity 1990 2013 The rapid economic growth of China blue is readily apparent 317 A proportional representation of Chinese exports 2019 China has the world s second largest economy in terms of nominal GDP 318 and the world s largest economy in terms of purchasing power parity PPP 319 As of 2021 China accounts for around 18 of the world economy by GDP nominal 320 China is one of the world s fastest growing major economies 321 with its economic growth having been consistently above 6 since the introduction of economic reforms in 1978 322 According to the World Bank China s GDP grew from 150 billion in 1978 to 17 73 trillion by 2021 323 Of the world s 500 largest companies 145 are headquartered in China 324 China had one of the largest economies in the world for most of the past two thousand years 325 during which it has seen cycles of prosperity and decline 326 327 Since economic reforms began in 1978 China has developed into a highly diversified economy and one of the most consequential players in international trade Major sectors of competitive strength include manufacturing retail mining steel textiles automobiles energy generation green energy banking electronics telecommunications real estate e commerce and tourism China has three out of the ten largest stock exchanges in the world 328 Shanghai Hong Kong and Shenzhen that together have a market capitalization of over 15 9 trillion as of October 2020 329 China has four Shanghai Hong Kong Beijing and Shenzhen out of the world s top ten most competitive financial centers which is more than any country in the 2020 Global Financial Centres Index 330 By 2035 China s four cities Shanghai Beijing Guangzhou and Shenzhen are projected to be among the global top ten largest cities by nominal GDP according to a report by Oxford Economics 331 Modern day China is considered an example of state capitalism or party state capitalism 332 333 The state dominates in strategic pillar sectors such as energy production and heavy industries but private enterprise has expanded enormously with around 30 million private businesses recorded in 2008 334 335 336 In 2018 private enterprises in China accounted for 60 of GDP 80 of urban employment and 90 of new jobs 337 better source needed China has been the world s No 1 manufacturer since 2010 after overtaking the US which had been No 1 for the previous hundred years 338 339 China has also been No 2 in high tech manufacturing since 2012 according to US National Science Foundation 340 China is the second largest retail market in the world next to the United States 341 China leads the world in e commerce accounting for 40 of the global market share in 2016 342 and more than 50 of the global market share in 2019 343 China is the world s leader in electric vehicles manufacturing and buying half of all the plug in electric cars BEV and PHEV in the world in 2018 344 China is also the leading producer of batteries for electric vehicles as well as several key raw materials for batteries 345 China had 174 GW of installed solar capacity by the end of 2018 which amounts to more than 40 of the global solar capacity 346 347 Wealth See also Income inequality in China Shanghai World Financial Center Jin Mao Tower and Shanghai Tower Lujiazui China accounted for 17 9 of the world s total wealth in 2021 second highest in the world after the US 348 It ranks at 65th at GDP nominal per capita making it an upper middle income country 349 China brought more people out of extreme poverty than any other country in history 350 351 between 1978 and 2018 China reduced extreme poverty by 800 million China reduced the extreme poverty rate per international standard it refers to an income of less than 1 90 day from 88 in 1981 to 1 85 by 2013 352 The portion of people in China living below the international poverty line of 1 90 per day 2011 PPP fell to 0 3 in 2018 from 66 3 in 1990 Using the lower middle income poverty line of 3 20 per day the portion fell to 2 9 in 2018 from 90 0 in 1990 Using the upper middle income poverty line of 5 50 per day the portion fell to 17 0 from 98 3 in 1990 353 From 1978 to 2018 the average standard of living multiplied by a factor of twenty six 354 Wages in China have grown a lot in the last 40 years real inflation adjusted wages grew seven fold from 1978 to 2007 355 Per capita incomes have risen significantly when the PRC was founded in 1949 per capita income in China was one fifth of the world average per capita incomes now equal the world average itself 354 China s development is highly uneven Its major cities and coastal areas are far more prosperous compared to rural and interior regions 356 It has a high level of economic inequality 357 which has increased in the past few decades 358 In 2018 China s Gini coefficient was 0 467 according to the World Bank 11 As of 2020 China was second in the world after the US in total number of billionaires and total number of millionaires with 698 Chinese billionaires and 4 4 million millionaires 359 In 2019 China overtook the US as the home to the highest number of people who have a net personal wealth of at least 110 000 according to the global wealth report by Credit Suisse 360 361 According to the Hurun Global Rich List 2020 China is home to five of the world s top ten cities Beijing Shanghai Hong Kong Shenzhen and Guangzhou in the 1st 3rd 4th 5th and 10th spots respectively by the highest number of billionaires which is more than any other country 362 China had 85 female billionaires as of January 2021 two thirds of the global total and minted 24 new female billionaires in 2020 363 China has had the world s largest middle class population since 2015 364 and the middle class grew to a size of 400 million by 2018 365 China in the global economy China s nominal GDP trend from 1952 to 2015 Share of world GDP PPP 366 Year Share1980 2 25 1990 3 99 2000 7 24 2010 13 62 2020 18 18 China is a member of the WTO and is the world s largest trading power with a total international trade value of US 4 62 trillion in 2018 367 China is the world s largest exporter and second largest importer of goods 368 Its foreign exchange reserves reached US 3 1 trillion as of 2019 369 making its reserves by far the world s largest 370 371 In 2012 China was the world s largest recipient of inward foreign direct investment FDI attracting 253 billion 372 In 2014 China s foreign exchange remittances were US64 billion making it the second largest recipient of remittances in the world 373 China also invests abroad with a total outward FDI of 62 4 billion in 2012 372 and a number of major takeovers of foreign firms by Chinese companies 374 China is a major owner of US public debt holding trillions of dollars worth of U S Treasury bonds 375 376 China s undervalued exchange rate has caused friction with other major economies 377 and it has also been widely criticized for manufacturing large quantities of counterfeit goods 378 379 Largest economies by nominal GDP in 2022 380 Following the 2007 08 financial crisis Chinese authorities sought to actively wean off of its dependence on the U S dollar as a result of perceived weaknesses of the international monetary system 381 To achieve those ends China took a series of actions to further the internationalization of the Renminbi In 2008 China established the dim sum bond market and expanded the Cross Border Trade RMB Settlement Pilot Project which helps establish pools of offshore RMB liquidity 382 383 This was followed with bilateral agreements to settle trades directly in renminbi with Russia 384 Japan 385 Australia 386 Singapore 387 the United Kingdom 388 and Canada 389 As a result of the rapid internationalization of the renminbi it became the eighth most traded currency in the world by 2018 an emerging international reserve currency 390 and a component of the IMF s special drawing rights however partly due to capital controls that make the renminbi fall short of being a fully convertible currency it remains far behind the Euro Dollar and Japanese Yen in international trade volumes 391 As of 2022 Yuan is the world s fifth most traded currency 392 Science and technologyMain articles Science and technology in China Chinese space program List of Chinese discoveries List of Chinese inventions and History of science and technology in China Historical Earliest known written formula for gunpowder from the Wujing Zongyao of 1044 CE China was a world leader in science and technology until the Ming dynasty 393 Ancient Chinese discoveries and inventions such as papermaking printing the compass and gunpowder the Four Great Inventions became widespread across East Asia the Middle East and later Europe Chinese mathematicians were the first to use negative numbers 394 395 By the 17th century the Western hemisphere surpassed China in scientific and technological advancement 396 The causes of this early modern Great Divergence continue to be debated by scholars 397 After repeated military defeats by the European colonial powers and Japan in the 19th century Chinese reformers began promoting modern science and technology as part of the Self Strengthening Movement After the Communists came to power in 1949 efforts were made to organize science and technology based on the model of the Soviet Union in which scientific research was part of central planning 398 After Mao s death in 1976 science and technology were promoted as one of the Four Modernizations 399 and the Soviet inspired academic system was gradually reformed 400 Modern era Headquarters of Tencent in Shenzhen one of the largest technology and entertainment companies in the world 401 Since the end of the Cultural Revolution China has made significant investments in scientific research 402 and is quickly catching up with the US in R amp D spending 403 404 China officially spent around 2 4 of its GDP on R amp D in 2020 totaling to around 377 8 billion 405 According to the World Intellectual Property Indicators China received more applications than the US did in 2018 and 2019 and ranked first globally in patents utility models trademarks industrial designs and creative goods exports in 2021 406 407 408 It was ranked 11th in the Global Innovation Index in 2022 a considerable improvement from its rank of 35th in 2013 409 410 411 412 Chinese supercomputers became the fastest in the world on a few occasions 413 However China has also struggled with developing several technologies domestically such as the most advanced semiconductors and reliable jet engines 414 415 Launch of Shenzhou 13 by a Long March 2F rocket China is one of the only three countries with independent human spaceflight capability China is developing its education system with an emphasis on science technology engineering and mathematics STEM 416 It became the world s largest publisher of scientific papers in 2016 417 418 419 Chinese born academicians have won prestigious prizes in the sciences and in mathematics although most of them had conducted their winning research in Western nations aa improper synthesis Space program The Chinese space program started in 1958 with some technology transfers from the Soviet Union However it did not launch the nation s first satellite until 1970 with the Dong Fang Hong I which made China the fifth country to do so independently 426 In 2003 China became the third country in the world to independently send humans into space with Yang Liwei s spaceflight aboard Shenzhou 5 as of 2022 update sixteen Chinese nationals have journeyed into space including two women In 2011 China launched its first space station testbed Tiangong 1 427 In 2013 a Chinese robotic rover Yutu successfully touched down on the lunar surface as part of the Chang e 3 mission 428 In 2019 China became the first country to land a probe Chang e 4 on the far side of the Moon 429 In 2020 Chang e 5 successfully returned moon samples to the Earth making China the third country to do so independently after the United States and the Soviet Union 430 In 2021 China became the second nation in history to independently land a rover Zhurong on Mars after the United States 431 China completed its own modular space station the Tiangong in low Earth orbit on 3 November 2022 432 433 434 On 29 November 2022 China performed its first in orbit crew handover aboard the Tiangong 435 436 InfrastructureAfter a decades long infrastructural boom 437 China has produced numerous world leading infrastructural projects China has the world s largest bullet train network 438 the most supertall skyscrapers in the world 439 the world s largest power plant the Three Gorges Dam 440 the largest energy generation capacity in the world 441 a global satellite navigation system with the largest number of satellites in the world 442 and has initiated the Belt and Road Initiative a large global infrastructure building initiative with funding on the order of 50 100 billion per year 443 The Belt and Road Initiative could be one of the largest development plans in modern history 444 Telecommunications Main article Telecommunications in China Internet penetration rates in China in the context of East Asia and Southeast Asia 1995 2012 China is the largest telecom market in the world and currently has the largest number of active cellphones of any country in the world with over 1 5 billion subscribers as of 2018 445 better source needed It also has the world s largest number of internet and broadband users with over 800 million Internet users as of 2018 update equivalent to around 60 of its population and almost all of them being mobile as well 446 By 2018 China had more than 1 billion 4G users accounting for 40 of world s total 447 China is making rapid advances in 5G by late 2018 China had started large scale and commercial 5G trials 448 China Mobile China Unicom and China Telecom are the three large providers of mobile and internet in China China Telecom alone served more than 145 million broadband subscribers and 300 million mobile users China Unicom had about 300 million subscribers and China Mobile the largest of them all had 925 million users as of 2018 449 Combined the three operators had over 3 4 million 4G base stations in China 450 Several Chinese telecommunications companies most notably Huawei and ZTE have been accused of spying for the Chinese military 451 China has developed its own satellite navigation system dubbed Beidou which began offering commercial navigation services across Asia in 2012 452 as well as global services by the end of 2018 453 454 Upon the completion of the 35th Beidou satellite which was launched into orbit on 23 June 2020 Beidou followed GPS and GLONASS as the third completed global navigation satellite in the world 455 Transport Main article Transport in China The Duge Bridge is the highest bridge in the world Since the late 1990s China s national road network has been significantly expanded through the creation of a network of national highways and expressways In 2018 China s highways had reached a total length of 142 500 km 88 500 mi making it the longest highway system in the world 456 better source needed China has the world s largest market for automobiles having surpassed the United States in both auto sales and production A side effect of the rapid growth of China s road network has been a significant rise in traffic accidents 457 though the number of fatalities in traffic accidents fell by 20 from 2007 to 2017 458 better source needed In urban areas bicycles remain a common mode of transport despite the increasing prevalence of automobiles as of 2012 update there are approximately 470 million bicycles in China 459 The Beijing Daxing International Airport features the world s largest single building airport terminal China s railways which are state owned are among the busiest in the world handling a quarter of the world s rail traffic volume on only 6 percent of the world s tracks in 2006 460 better source needed As of 2017 the country had 127 000 km 78 914 mi of railways the second longest network in the world 461 The railways strain to meet enormous demand particularly during the Chinese New Year holiday when the world s largest annual human migration takes place 462 China s high speed rail HSR system started construction in the early 2000s By the end of 2020 high speed rail in China had reached 37 900 kilometers 23 550 miles of dedicated lines alone making it the longest HSR network in the world 463 464 Services on the Beijing Shanghai Beijing Tianjin and Chengdu Chongqing Lines reach up to 350 km h 217 mph making them the fastest conventional high speed railway services in the world With an annual ridership of over 2 29 billion passengers in 2019 it is the world s busiest 465 better source needed The network includes the Beijing Guangzhou Shenzhen High Speed Railway the single longest HSR line in the world and the Beijing Shanghai High Speed Railway which has three of longest railroad bridges in the world 466 The Shanghai Maglev Train which reaches 431 km h 268 mph is the fastest commercial train service in the world 467 The Port of Shanghai s deep water harbor on Yangshan Island in the Hangzhou Bay is the world s busiest container port since 2010 Since 2000 the growth of rapid transit systems in Chinese cities has accelerated 468 As of January 2021 update 44 Chinese cities have urban mass transit systems in operation 469 and 39 more have metro systems approved 470 As of 2020 China boasts the five longest metro systems in the world with the networks in Shanghai Beijing Guangzhou Chengdu and Shenzhen being the largest There were approximately 229 airports in 2017 with around 240 planned by 2020 China has over 2 000 river and seaports about 130 of which are open to foreign shipping 471 In 2017 the Ports of Shanghai Hong Kong Shenzhen Ningbo Zhoushan Guangzhou Qingdao and Tianjin ranked in the Top 10 in the world in container traffic and cargo tonnage 472 Water supply and sanitation Main article Water supply and sanitation in China Water supply and sanitation infrastructure in China is facing challenges such as rapid urbanization as well as water scarcity contamination and pollution 473 According to data presented by the Joint Monitoring Program for Water Supply and Sanitation of WHO and UNICEF in 2015 about 36 of the rural population in China still did not have access to improved sanitation 474 The ongoing South North Water Transfer Project intends to abate water shortage in the north 475 DemographicsMain article Demographics of China A 2009 population density map of the People s Republic of China with territories not under its control in blue The eastern coastal provinces are much more densely populated than the western interior The national census of 2020 recorded the population of the People s Republic of China as approximately 1 411 778 724 According to the 2020 census about 17 95 of the population were 14 years old or younger 63 35 were between 15 and 59 years old and 18 7 were over 60 years old 8 The population growth rate for 2013 is estimated to be 0 46 476 China used to make up much of the world s poor now it makes up much of the world s middle class 477 Although a middle income country by Western standards China s rapid growth has pulled hundreds of millions 800 million to be more precise 478 of its people out of poverty since 1978 By 2013 less than 2 of the Chinese population lived below the international poverty line of US 1 9 per day down from 88 in 1981 352 From 2009 to 2018 the unemployment rate in China has averaged about 4 479 Given concerns about population growth China implemented a two child limit during the 1970s and in 1979 began to advocate for an even stricter limit of one child per family Beginning in the mid 1980s however given the unpopularity of the strict limits China began to allow some major exemptions particularly in rural areas resulting in what was actually a 1 5 child policy from the mid 1980s to 2015 ethnic minorities were also exempt from one child limits The next major loosening of the policy was enacted in December 2013 allowing families to have two children if one parent is an only child 480 In 2016 the one child policy was replaced in favor of a two child policy 481 A three child policy was announced on 31 May 2021 due to population aging 482 and in July 2021 all family size limits as well as penalties for exceeding them were removed 483 According to data from the 2020 census China s total fertility rate is 1 3 but some experts believe that after adjusting for the transient effects of the relaxation of restrictions the country s actual total fertility rate is as low as 1 1 484 According to one group of scholars one child limits had little effect on population growth 485 or the size of the total population 486 However these scholars have been challenged Their own counterfactual model of fertility decline without such restrictions implies that China averted more than 500 million births between 1970 and 2015 a number which may reach one billion by 2060 given all the lost descendants of births averted during the era of fertility restrictions with one child restrictions accounting for the great bulk of that reduction 487 The policy along with traditional preference for boys may have contributed to an imbalance in the sex ratio at birth 488 489 According to the 2010 census the sex ratio at birth was 118 06 boys for every 100 girls 490 which is beyond the normal range of around 105 boys for every 100 girls 491 The 2010 census found that males accounted for 51 27 percent of the total population 490 However China s sex ratio is more balanced than it was in 1953 when males accounted for 51 82 percent of the total population 490 Ethnic groups Main articles List of ethnic groups in China Ethnic minorities in China and Ethnic groups in Chinese history Ethnolinguistic map of China China legally recognizes 56 distinct ethnic groups who altogether comprise the Zhonghua Minzu The largest of these nationalities are the ethnic Chinese or Han who constitute more than 90 of the total population 492 The Han Chinese the world s largest single ethnic group 493 outnumber other ethnic groups in every provincial level division except Tibet and Xinjiang 494 Ethnic minorities account for less than 10 of the population of China according to the 2010 census 492 Compared with the 2000 population census the Han population increased by 66 537 177 persons or 5 74 while the population of the 55 national minorities combined increased by 7 362 627 persons or 6 92 492 The 2010 census recorded a total of 593 832 foreign nationals living in China The largest such groups were from South Korea 120 750 the United States 71 493 and Japan 66 159 495 Languages Main articles Languages of China and List of endangered languages in China A trilingual sign in Xishuangbanna with Tai Lu language on the top Lihaozhai High School in Jianshui Yunnan The sign is in Hani Latin alphabet Nisu Yi script and Chinese There are as many as 292 living languages in China 496 The languages most commonly spoken belong to the Sinitic branch of the Sino Tibetan language family which contains Mandarin spoken by 70 of the population 497 and other varieties of Chinese language Yue including Cantonese and Taishanese Wu including Shanghainese and Suzhounese Min including Fuzhounese Hokkien and Teochew Xiang Gan and Hakka Languages of the Tibeto Burman branch including Tibetan Qiang Naxi and Yi are spoken across the Tibetan and Yunnan Guizhou Plateau Other ethnic minority languages in southwest China include Zhuang Thai Dong and Sui of the Tai Kadai family Miao and Yao of the Hmong Mien family and Wa of the Austroasiatic family Across northeastern and northwestern China local ethnic groups speak Altaic languages including Manchu Mongolian and several Turkic languages Uyghur Kazakh Kyrgyz Salar and Western Yugur Korean is spoken natively along the border with North Korea Sarikoli the language of Tajiks in western Xinjiang is an Indo European language Taiwanese aborigines including a small population on the mainland speak Austronesian languages 498 Standard Mandarin a variety of Mandarin based on the Beijing dialect is the official national language of China and is used as a lingua franca in the country between people of different linguistic backgrounds 499 500 Mongolian Uyghur Tibetan Zhuang and various other languages are also regionally recognized throughout the country 501 Chinese characters have been used as the written script for the Sinitic languages for thousands of years They allow speakers of mutually unintelligible Chinese varieties to communicate with each other through writing In 1956 the government introduced simplified characters which have supplanted the older traditional characters in mainland China Chinese characters are romanized using the Pinyin system Tibetan uses an alphabet based on an Indic script Uyghur is most commonly written in Persian alphabet based Uyghur Arabic alphabet The Mongolian script used in China and the Manchu script are both derived from the Old Uyghur alphabet Zhuang uses both an official Latin alphabet script and a traditional Chinese character script citation needed Urbanization See also List of cities in China List of cities in China by population and Megalopolises in China Map of the ten largest cities in China 2010 China has urbanized significantly in recent decades The percent of the country s population living in urban areas increased from 20 in 1980 to over 60 in 2019 502 503 504 It is estimated that China s urban population will reach one billion by 2030 potentially equivalent to one eighth of the world population 503 504 China has over 160 cities with a population of over one million 505 including the 17 megacities as of 2021 506 507 cities with a population of over 10 million of Chongqing Shanghai Beijing Chengdu Guangzhou Shenzhen Tianjin Xi an Suzhou Zhengzhou Wuhan Hangzhou Linyi Shijiazhuang Dongguan Qingdao and Changsha 508 Among them the total permanent population of Chongqing Shanghai Beijing and Chengdu is above 20 million 509 Shanghai is China s most populous urban area 510 511 while Chongqing is its largest city proper the only city in China with the largest permanent population of over 30 million 512 By 2025 it is estimated that the country will be home to 221 cities with over a million inhabitants 503 The figures in the table below are from the 2017 census 513 and are only estimates of the urban populations within administrative city limits a different ranking exists when considering the total municipal populations which includes suburban and rural populations The large floating populations of migrant workers make conducting censuses in urban areas difficult 514 the figures below include only long term residents citation needed vte Largest cities or municipalities in the People s Republic of China China Urban Construction Statistical Yearbook 2020 Urban Population and Urban Temporary Population 515 note 1 note 2 Rank Name Province Pop Rank Name Province Pop Shanghai Beijing 1 Shanghai SH 24 281 400 11 Hong Kong HK 7 448 900 Guangzhou Shenzhen2 Beijing BJ 19 164 000 12 Zhengzhou HA 7 179 4003 Guangzhou GD 13 858 700 13 Nanjing JS 6 823 5004 Shenzhen GD 13 438 800 14 Xi an SN 6 642 1005 Tianjin TJ 11 744 400 15 Jinan SD 6 409 6006 Chongqing CQ 11 488 000 16 Shenyang LN 5 900 0007 Dongguan GD 9 752 500 17 Qingdao SD 5 501 4008 Chengdu SC 8 875 600 18 Harbin HL 5 054 5009 Wuhan HB 8 652 900 19 Hefei AH 4 750 10010 Hangzhou ZJ 8 109 000 20 Changchun JL 4 730 900 Population of Hong Kong as of 2018 estimate 516 The data of Chongqing in the list is the data of Metropolitan Developed Economic Area which contains two parts City Proper and Metropolitan Area The City proper are consist of 9 districts Yuzhong Dadukou Jiangbei Shapingba Jiulongpo Nan an Beibei Yubei amp Banan has the urban population of 5 646 300 as of 2018 And the Metropolitan Area are consist of 12 districts Fuling Changshou Jiangjin Hechuan Yongchuan Nanchuan Qijiang Dazu Bishan Tongliang Tongnan amp Rongchang has the urban population of 5 841 700 517 Total urban population of all 26 districts of Chongqing are up to 15 076 600 Education Main articles Education in China Higher education in China and List of universities in China Beijing s Peking University one of the top ranked universities in China 518 519 Since 1986 compulsory education in China comprises primary and junior secondary school which together last for nine years 520 In 2021 about 91 4 percent of students continued their education at a three year senior secondary school 521 The Gaokao China s national university entrance exam is a prerequisite for entrance into most higher education institutions In 2010 24 percent of secondary school graduates were enrolled in higher education 522 This number increased significantly over the last decades reaching a tertiary school enrolment of 58 42 percent in 2020 523 Vocational education is available to students at the secondary and tertiary level 524 More than 10 million Chinese students graduated from vocational colleges nationwide every year 525 China has the largest education system in the world with about 282 million students and 17 32 million full time teachers in over 530 000 schools 526 In February 2006 the government pledged to provide completely free nine year education including textbooks and fees 527 Annual education investment went from less than US 50 billion in 2003 to more than US 817 billion in 2020 528 529 However there remains an inequality in education spending In 2010 the annual education expenditure per secondary school student in Beijing totalled 20 023 while in Guizhou one of the poorest provinces in China only totalled 3 204 530 Free compulsory education in China consists of primary school and junior secondary school between the ages of 6 and 15 In 2020 the graduation enrollment ratio at compulsory education level reached 95 2 percent exceeding average levels recorded in high income countries 526 and around 91 2 of Chinese have received secondary education 524 China s literacy rate has grown dramatically from only 20 in 1949 and 65 5 in 1979 531 to 97 of the population over age 15 in 2018 532 In the same year China Beijing Shanghai Jiangsu and Zhejiang was ranked the highest in the world in the Programme for International Student Assessment ranking for all three categories of Mathematics Science and Reading 533 As of 2021 China has over 3 000 universities with over 44 3 million students enrolled in mainland China and 240 million Chinese citizens have received high education making China the largest higher education system in the world 534 535 536 As of 2021 China had the world s second highest number of top universities the highest in Asia amp Oceania region 537 Currently China trails only the United States in terms of representation on lists of top 200 universities according to the Academic Ranking of World Universities ARWU 538 China is home to the two of the highest ranking universities Tsinghua University and Peking University in Asia and emerging economies according to the Times Higher Education World University Rankings 539 As of 2022 two universities in Mainland China rank in the world s top 15 with Peking University 12th and Tsinghua University 14th and three other universities ranking in the world s top 50 namely Fudan Zhejiang and Shanghai Jiao Tong according to the QS World University Rankings 540 These universities are members of the C9 League an alliance of elite Chinese universities offering comprehensive and leading education 541 Health Main article Health in China See also Medicine in China Pharmaceutical industry in China and COVID 19 pandemic in mainland China Chart showing the rise of China s Human Development Index from 1970 to 2010 The National Health and Family Planning Commission together with its counterparts in the local commissions oversees the health needs of the Chinese population 542 An emphasis on public health and preventive medicine has characterized Chinese health policy since the early 1950s At that time the Communist Party started the Patriotic Health Campaign which was aimed at improving sanitation and hygiene as well as treating and preventing several diseases Diseases such as cholera typhoid and scarlet fever which were previously rife in China were nearly eradicated by the campaign citation needed After Deng Xiaoping began instituting economic reforms in 1978 the health of the Chinese public improved rapidly because of better nutrition although many of the free public health services provided in the countryside disappeared along with the People s Communes Healthcare in China became mostly privatized and experienced a significant rise in quality In 2009 the government began a 3 year large scale healthcare provision initiative worth US 124 billion 543 By 2011 the campaign resulted in 95 of China s population having basic health insurance coverage 544 In 2011 China was estimated to be the world s third largest supplier of pharmaceuticals but its population has suffered from the development and distribution of counterfeit medications 545 As of 2017 update the average life expectancy at birth in China is 76 years 546 and the infant mortality rate is 7 per thousand 547 Both have improved significantly since the 1950s ab Rates of stunting a condition caused by malnutrition have declined from 33 1 in 1990 to 9 9 in 2010 550 Despite significant improvements in health and the construction of advanced medical facilities China has several emerging public health problems such as respiratory illnesses caused by widespread air pollution 551 hundreds of millions of cigarette smokers 552 and an increase in obesity among urban youths 553 554 China s large population and densely populated cities have led to serious disease outbreaks in recent years such as the 2003 outbreak of SARS although this has since been largely contained 555 In 2010 air pollution caused 1 2 million premature deaths in China 556 The COVID 19 pandemic was first identified in Wuhan in December 2019 557 558 Further studies are being carried out around the world on a possible origin for the virus 559 560 The Chinese government has been criticized for its handling of the epidemic and accused of concealing the extent of the outbreak before it became an international pandemic 561 Religion Main article Religion in China Geographic distribution of religions in China 562 563 564 565 Chinese folk religion including Confucianism Taoism and groups of Chinese Buddhism Buddhism tout court Islam Ethnic minorities indigenous religions Mongolian folk religion Northeast China folk religion influenced by Tungus and Manchu shamanism widespread Shanrendao The government of the People s Republic of China officially espouses state atheism 566 and has conducted antireligious campaigns to this end 567 Religious affairs and issues in the country are overseen by the State Administration for Religious Affairs 568 Freedom of religion is guaranteed by China s constitution although religious organizations that lack official approval can be subject to state persecution 290 569 Over the millennia Chinese civilization has been influenced by various religious movements The three teachings including Confucianism Taoism and Buddhism Chinese Buddhism historically have a significant role in shaping Chinese culture 570 571 enriching a theological and spiritual framework which harks back to the early Shang and Zhou dynasty Chinese popular or folk religion which is framed by the three teachings and other traditions 572 consists in allegiance to the shen 神 a character that signifies the energies of generation who can be deities of the environment or ancestral principles of human groups concepts of civility culture heroes many of whom feature in Chinese mythology and history 573 Among the most popular cults are those of Mazu goddess of the seas 574 Huangdi one of the two divine patriarchs of the Chinese race 574 575 Guandi god of war and business Caishen god of prosperity and richness Pangu and many others China is home to many of the world s tallest religious statues including the tallest of all the Spring Temple Buddha in Henan 576 Clear data on religious affiliation in China is difficult to gather due to varying definitions of religion and the unorganized diffusive nature of Chinese religious traditions Scholars note that in China there is no clear boundary between three teachings religions and local folk religious practice 570 A 2015 poll conducted by Gallup International found that 61 of Chinese people self identified as convinced atheist 577 though it is worthwhile to note that Chinese religions or some of their strands are definable as non theistic and humanistic religions since they do not believe that divine creativity is completely transcendent but it is inherent in the world and in particular in the human being 578 According to a 2014 study approximately 74 are either non religious or practice Chinese folk belief 16 are Buddhists 2 are Christians 1 are Muslims and 8 adhere to other religions including Taoists and folk salvationism 579 580 In addition to Han people s local religious practices there are also various ethnic minority groups in China who maintain their traditional autochthone religions The various folk religions today comprise 2 3 of the population while Confucianism as a religious self identification is common within the intellectual class Significant faiths specifically connected to certain ethnic groups include Tibetan Buddhism and the Islamic religion of the Hui Uyghur Kazakh Kyrgyz and other peoples in Northwest China citation needed The 2010 population census reported the total number of Muslims in the country as 23 14 million 581 A 2021 poll from Ipsos and the Policy Institute at King s College London found that 35 of Chinese people said there was tension between different religious groups which was the second lowest percentage of the 28 countries surveyed 582 583 CultureMain articles Chinese culture and Culture of the People s Republic of China The Temple of Heaven a center of heaven worship and an UNESCO World Heritage site symbolizes the Interactions Between Heaven and Mankind 584 Fenghuang County an ancient town that harbors many architectural remains of Ming and Qing styles Since ancient times Chinese culture has been heavily influenced by Confucianism For much of the country s dynastic era opportunities for social advancement could be provided by high performance in the prestigious imperial examinations which have their origins in the Han dynasty 585 The literary emphasis of the exams affected the general perception of cultural refinement in China such as the belief that calligraphy poetry and painting were higher forms of art than dancing or drama Chinese culture has long emphasized a sense of deep history and a largely inward looking national perspective 586 Examinations and a culture of merit remain greatly valued in China today 587 A Moon gate in a Chinese garden The first leaders of the People s Republic of China were born into the traditional imperial order but were influenced by the May Fourth Movement and reformist ideals They sought to change some traditional aspects of Chinese culture such as rural land tenure sexism and the Confucian system of education while preserving others such as the family structure and culture of obedience to the state Some observers see the period following the establishment of the PRC in 1949 as a continuation of traditional Chinese dynastic history while others claim that the Communist Party s rule has damaged the foundations of Chinese culture especially through political movements such as the Cultural Revolution of the 1960s where many aspects of traditional culture were destroyed having been denounced as regressive and harmful or vestiges of feudalism Many important aspects of traditional Chinese morals and culture such as Confucianism art literature and performing arts like Peking opera 588 were altered to conform to government policies and propaganda at the time Access to foreign media remains heavily restricted 589 Today the Chinese government has accepted numerous elements of traditional Chinese culture as being integral to Chinese society With the rise of Chinese nationalism and the end of the Cultural Revolution various forms of traditional Chinese art literature music film fashion and architecture have seen a vigorous revival 590 591 and folk and variety art in particular have sparked interest nationally and even worldwide 592 Tourism Main articles Tourism in China and List of World Heritage Sites in China China received 55 7 million inbound international visitors in 2010 593 and in 2012 was the third most visited country in the world 594 It also experiences an enormous volume of domestic tourism an estimated 740 million Chinese holidaymakers traveled within the country in October 2012 595 China hosts the world s second largest number of World Heritage Sites 56 after Italy and is one of the most popular tourist destinations in the world first in the Asia Pacific Literature Main article Chinese literature The stories in Journey to the West are common themes in Peking opera Chinese literature is based on the literature of the Zhou dynasty 596 Concepts covered within the Chinese classic texts present a wide range of thoughts and subjects including calendar military astrology herbology geography and many others 597 Some of the most important early texts include the I Ching and the Shujing within the Four Books and Five Classics which served as the Confucian authoritative books for the state sponsored curriculum in dynastic era 598 Inherited from the Classic of Poetry classical Chinese poetry developed to its floruit during the Tang dynasty Li Bai and Du Fu opened the forking ways for the poetic circles through romanticism and realism respectively 599 Chinese historiography began with the Shiji the overall scope of the historiographical tradition in China is termed the Twenty Four Histories which set a vast stage for Chinese fictions along with Chinese mythology and folklore 600 Pushed by a burgeoning citizen class in the Ming dynasty Chinese classical fiction rose to a boom of the historical town and gods and demons fictions as represented by the Four Great Classical Novels which include Water Margin Romance of the Three Kingdoms Journey to the West and Dream of the Red Chamber 601 Along with the wuxia fictions of Jin Yong and Liang Yusheng 602 it remains an enduring source of popular culture in the East Asian cultural sphere 603 In the wake of the New Culture Movement after the end of the Qing dynasty Chinese literature embarked on a new era with written vernacular Chinese for ordinary citizens Hu Shih and Lu Xun were pioneers in modern literature 604 Various literary genres such as misty poetry scar literature young adult fiction and the xungen literature which is influenced by magic realism 605 emerged following the Cultural Revolution Mo Yan a xungen literature author was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2012 606 Cuisine Main article Chinese cuisine Map showing major regional cuisines of China Chinese cuisine is highly diverse drawing on several millennia of culinary history and geographical variety in which the most influential are known as the Eight Major Cuisines including Sichuan Cantonese Jiangsu Shandong Fujian Hunan Anhui and Zhejiang cuisines 607 All of them are featured by the precise skills of shaping heating and flavoring 608 better source needed Chinese cuisine is also known for its width of cooking methods and ingredients 609 as well as food therapy that is emphasized by traditional Chinese medicine 610 better source needed Generally China s staple food is rice in the south wheat based breads and noodles in the north The diet of the common people in pre modern times was largely grain and simple vegetables with meat reserved for special occasions The bean products such as tofu and soy milk remain as a popular source of protein 611 Pork is now the most popular meat in China accounting for about three fourths of the country s total meat consumption 612 While pork dominates the meat market there is also the vegetarian Buddhist cuisine and the pork free Chinese Islamic cuisine Southern cuisine due to the area s proximity to the ocean and milder climate has a wide variety of seafood and vegetables it differs in many respects from the wheat based diets across dry northern China Numerous offshoots of Chinese food such as Hong Kong cuisine and American Chinese food have emerged in the nations that play host to the Chinese diaspora citation needed Music Main articles Music of China C pop and Chinese opera Chinese music covers a highly diverse range of music from traditional music to modern music Chinese music dates back before the pre imperial times Traditional Chinese musical instruments were traditionally grouped into eight categories known as bayin 八音 Traditional Chinese opera is a form of musical theatre in China originating thousands of years and has regional style forms such as Beijing opera and Cantonese opera 613 Chinese pop C Pop includes mandopop and cantopop Chinese rap Chinese hip hop and Hong Kong hip hop have become popular in contemporary times 614 Cinema Main article Cinema of China Cinema was first introduced to China in 1896 and the first Chinese film Dingjun Mountain was released in 1905 615 China has the largest number of movie screens in the world since 2016 616 China became the largest cinema market in the world in 2020 617 618 The top 3 highest grossing films in China currently are Wolf Warrior 2 2017 Ne Zha 2019 and The Wandering Earth 2019 619 Fashion Main articles Fashion in China and Hanfu Hanfu is the historical clothing of the Han people in China The qipao or cheongsam is a popular Chinese female dress 620 The hanfu movement has been popular in contemporary times and seeks to revitalize Hanfu clothing 621 Sports Main articles Sport in China China at the Olympics and China at the Paralympics China has one of the oldest sporting cultures in the world There is evidence that archery shejian was practiced during the Western Zhou dynasty Swordplay jianshu and cuju a sport loosely related to association football 622 date back to China s early dynasties as well 623 Go is an abstract strategy board game for two players in which the aim is to surround more territory than the opponent and was invented in China more than 2 500 years ago Physical fitness is widely emphasized in Chinese culture with morning exercises such as qigong and t ai chi ch uan widely practiced 624 and commercial gyms and private fitness clubs are gaining popularity across the country 625 Basketball is currently the most popular spectator sport in China 626 The Chinese Basketball Association and the American National Basketball Association have a huge following among the people with native or ethnic Chinese players such as Yao Ming and Yi Jianlian held in high esteem 627 China s professional football league now known as Chinese Super League was established in 1994 it is the largest football market in Asia 628 Other popular sports in the country include martial arts table tennis badminton swimming and snooker Board games such as go known as weiqi in Chinese xiangqi mahjong and more recently chess are also played at a professional level 629 In addition China is home to a huge number of cyclists with an estimated 470 million bicycles as of 2012 update 459 Many more traditional sports such as dragon boat racing Mongolian style wrestling and horse racing are also popular 630 China has participated in the Olympic Games since 1932 although it has only participated as the PRC since 1952 China hosted the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing where its athletes received 48 gold medals the highest number of gold medals of any participating nation that year 631 China also won the most medals of any nation at the 2012 Summer Paralympics with 231 overall including 95 gold medals 632 633 In 2011 Shenzhen in Guangdong China hosted the 2011 Summer Universiade China hosted the 2013 East Asian Games in Tianjin and the 2014 Summer Youth Olympics in Nanjing the first country to host both regular and Youth Olympics Beijing and its nearby city Zhangjiakou of Hebei province collaboratively hosted the 2022 Olympic Winter Games making Beijing the first dual olympic city in the world by holding both the Summer Olympics and the Winter Olympics 634 635 See also China portal Asia portalOutline of ChinaNotes Chinese and English are the official languages in Hong Kong only Chinese and Portuguese are the official languages in Macau only In the Hong Kong Traditional Chinese characters and English alphabet are used In the Macau Traditional Chinese characters and Portuguese orthography are used In Inner Mongolia the Mongolian script is used alongside simplified Chinese In the Tibet Autonomous Region the Tibetan script is used alongside simplified Chinese In Xinjiang the Uyghur Arabic alphabet is used alongside simplified Chinese In Guangxi and Wenshan Prefecture the Latin alphabet is used alongside simplified Chinese In the Yanbian Korean Autonomous Prefecture Chosŏn gŭl is used alongside simplified Chinese The top position in one party ruling China Although PRC President is head of state it is a largely ceremonial office with limited power under CCP General Secretary Including both state and party s central military chairs Chairman of the Chinese People s Political Consultative Conference The area given is the official United Nations figure for the mainland and excludes Hong Kong Macau and Taiwan 3 It also excludes the Trans Karakoram Tract 5 180 km2 2 000 sq mi Aksai Chin 38 000 km2 15 000 sq mi and other territories in dispute with India The total area of China is listed as 9 572 900 km2 3 696 100 sq mi by the Encyclopaedia Britannica 4 For further information see Territorial changes of the People s Republic of China This figure was calculated using data from the CIA World Factbook 6 GDP figures exclude Taiwan and the special administrative regions of Hong Kong and Macau Hong Kong dollar used in Hong Kong and MacauMacanese pataca used in Macau only Chinese 中华人民共和国 pinyin Zhōnghua Renmin Gongheguo China s border with Pakistan is disputed by India which claims the entire Kashmir region as its territory The total area ranking relative to the United States depends on the measurement of the total areas of both countries See List of countries and dependencies by area for more information The following two primary sources non mirrored represent the range min max of estimates of China s and the United States total areas Both sources 1 exclude Taiwan from the area of China 2 exclude China s coastal and territorial waters However the CIA World Factbook includes the United States coastal and territorial waters while Encyclopaedia Britannica excludes the United States coastal and territorial waters The Encyclopaedia Britannica lists China as world s third largest country after Russia and Canada with a total area of 9 572 900 km2 13 and the United States as fourth largest at 9 525 067 km2 14 The CIA World Factbook lists China as the fourth largest country after Russia Canada and the United States with a total area of 9 596 960 km2 15 and the United States as the third largest at 9 833 517 km2 16 Notably the Encyclopaedia Britannica specifies the United States area excluding coastal and territorial waters as 9 525 067 km2 which is less than either source s figure given for China s area 14 Therefore while it can be determined that China has a larger area excluding coastal and territorial waters it is unclear which country has a larger area including coastal and territorial waters The United Nations Statistics Division s figure for the United States is 9 833 517 km2 3 796 742 sq mi and China is 9 596 961 km2 3 705 407 sq mi These closely match the CIA World Factbook figures and similarly include coastal and territorial waters for the United States but exclude coastal and territorial waters for China Further explanation of disputed ranking The dispute about which is the world s third largest country arose from the inclusion of coastal and territorial waters for the United States This discrepancy was deduced from comparing the CIA World Factbook and its previous iterations 17 against the information for United States in Encyclopaedia Britannica particularly its footnote section 14 In sum according to older versions of the CIA World Factbook from 1982 to 1996 the U S was listed as the world s fourth largest country after Russia Canada and China with a total area of 9 372 610 km2 3 618 780 sq mi However in the 1997 edition the U S added coastal waters to its total area increasing it to 9 629 091 km2 3 717 813 sq mi And then again in 2007 U S added territorial water to its total area increasing it to 9 833 517 km2 3 796 742 sq mi During this time China s total area remained unchanged In other words no coastal or territorial water area was added to China s total area figure The United States has a coastal water area of 109 362 km2 42 225 sq mi and a territorial water area of 195 213 km2 75 372 sq mi for a total of 304 575 km2 117 597 sq mi of additional water space This is larger than entire countries like Italy New Zealand and the United Kingdom Adding this figure to the U S will boost it over China in ranking since China s coastal and territorial water figures are currently unknown no official publication and thus cannot be added into China s total area figure a b China claims the de facto state of Taiwan which it does not control as its disputed 23rd province i e Taiwan Province See Administrative divisions for more details The island of Hainan was taken on 1 May 1950 while the unrecognized polity of Tibet was annexed on 23 May 1951 The KMT solely governed the island until its transition to democracy in 1996 Next vnto this is found the great China whose kyng is thought to bee the greatest prince in the worlde and is named Santoa Raia 19 20 The Very Great Kingdom of China 21 Portuguese O Grande Reino da China 22 Although this is the present meaning of guo in Old Chinese when its pronunciation was something like qʷˤek 28 it meant the walled city of the Chinese and the areas they could control from them 29 Its earliest extant use is on the ritual bronze vessel He zun where it apparently refers to only the Shang s immediate demesne conquered by the Zhou 30 Its meaning Zhou s royal demesne is attested from the 6th century BC Classic of History which states Huangtian bestowed the lands and the peoples of the central state to the ancestors 皇天既付中國民越厥疆土于先王 31 Owing to Qin Shi Huang s earlier policy involving the burning of books and burying of scholars the destruction of the confiscated copies at Xianyang was an event similar to the destructions of the Library of Alexandria in the west Even those texts that did survive had to be painstakingly reconstructed from memory luck or forgery 59 The Old Texts of the Five Classics were said to have been found hidden in a wall at the Kong residence in Qufu Mei Ze s rediscovered edition of the Book of Documents was only shown to be a forgery in the Qing dynasty China is larger than Canada and the United States in terms of land area According to the Encyclopaedia Britannica the total area of the United States at 9 522 055 km2 3 676 486 sq mi is slightly smaller than that of China Meanwhile the CIA World Factbook states that China s total area was greater than that of the United States until the coastal waters of the Great Lakes was added to the United States total area in 1996 From 1989 through 1996 the total area of US was listed as 9 372 610 km2 3 618 780 sq mi land area plus inland water only The listed total area changed to 9 629 091 km2 3 717 813 sq mi in 1997 with the Great Lakes areas and the coastal waters added to 9 631 418 km2 3 718 711 sq mi in 2004 to 9 631 420 km2 3 718 710 sq mi in 2006 and to 9 826 630 km2 3 794 080 sq mi in 2007 territorial waters added China s border with Pakistan and part of its border with India falls in the disputed region of Kashmir The area under Pakistani administration is claimed by India while the area under Indian administration is claimed by Pakistan Meaning cities that are not divided into districts 不设区的市 counties 县 city districts 市辖区 towns 镇 townships 乡 and lastly ethnic townships 民族乡 Tsung Dao Lee 420 Chen Ning Yang 420 Daniel C Tsui 421 Charles K Kao 422 Yuan T Lee 423 Tu Youyou 424 Shing Tung Yau 425 The national life expectancy at birth rose from about 31 years in 1949 to 75 years in 2008 548 and infant mortality decreased from 300 per thousand in the 1950s to around 33 per thousand in 2001 549 References Main Data of the Seventh National Population Census Stats gov cn Retrieved 25 July 2021 Chinese Religion GRF globalreligiousfutures org a b Demographic Yearbook 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