Off the wire
Xinhua Insight: Infant trafficking rooted in poverty, ignorance of law  • Cuba regains control of Havana Club rum brand in U.S.  • Mourinho writes six-page Manchester United job application - reports  • Unbeaten Thurman to defend title against Porter  • LeBron denies involvement in coach Blatt firing  • NHL, NBA games postponed as blizzard hits US East Coast  • First direct flight links Xinjiang, southeastern Asia  • Western, central Japan blanketed by heavy snow  • Relocation of U.S. base dominates Japan's Ginowan city mayoral election  • Chinese president back home after visits to Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Iran  
You are here:   Home

China Exclusive: Beijing to cap population at 23 mln by 2020

Xinhua, January 24, 2016 Adjust font size:

Beijing will cap its population at 23 million by 2020, officials said during the annual local "two sessions".

The two sessions refer to meetings of the Municipal People's Congress, the local legislature, and the Municipal Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, a local political advisory body.

In the next five years, Beijing will continue to relocate population from downtown areas to suburban areas, said mayor Wang Anshun. Permanent population in the downtown areas will drop by 15 percent from 2014.

The population ceilings have been made according to the maximum capacity of resources such as water, sources said.

Beijing has seen slower population growth in recent years thanks to the efforts in adjustment of city functions and relocation of relevant industries. In the last five years, annual growth rate was 2 percent, compared with 5 percent in previous years, statistics show.

In 2015, Beijing had 21.7 million permanent residents. Beijing aims to limit its population within 22 million in 2016.

In the past decades, Beijing has repeatedly failed its population control targets, as people from across the country flocked to the national capital, attracted by its advantages in economic, cultural, educational and medical resources, among others.

Increasing population adds pressure on local resources such as water and worsens traffic congestion and environment problems.

"It has been difficult to simply force out the people, without finding proper destinations for the relocated population," said vice mayor Li Shixiang, adding that a coordinated development plan of Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei has come as a desirable solution.

Lu Yan, director of the Beijing Municipal Development and Reform Commission, the economic planning body, said Beijing will continue with its relocation plan, and divert its population to new towns and outlying regions.

In 2016, about 300 companies, mainly manufacturing businesses, will be moved out of the city propery. In the next five years, large logistics bases and wholesale markets will be moved out from the areas within the fourth ring road.

Measures will also be taken to ease the demographic pressure on downtown regions.

The Xicheng district will reduce its population by 3 percent in 2016, while the Dongcheng district will limit its population by relocating hospitals and cutting the number of recruits in the technical schools.

Meanwhile, Beijing will continue to move its municipal administrative organs from downtown area to east suburban Tongzhou district next year, said mayor Wang Anshun.

By 2017, some of Beijing's administrative organs will be moved into Tongzhou, he said. Endi