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Why is China's Uighur population shrinking?

Uighurs from Xinjiang prepare on June 26 to fete the 25th anniversary of Hong Kong's handover to China from Britain. (Photo: Reuters)

After becoming the Communist Party of China's (CPC's) chief of Xinjiang province in 2016, Chen Quanguo oversaw a security crackdown that led to a sharp drop in births. Some observers accused China's leadership of committing genocide against the province's mostly Muslim Uighur population through forced sterilisation and abortion. Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi dismissed the allegations as "fake news", arguing that Xinjiang's Uighur population had grown steadily to 12.7 million in 2018, an increase of 25% from 2010 -- and higher than the 14% increase in the province's total population.

But recently released 2020 census figures show that Xinjiang's Uighur population had grown by only 16% since 2010 during that decade to 11.6 million, compared to a 19% increase in Xinjiang's total population. Even more shocking, the Uighur population aged 0-4 was only 36% the size of that aged 5-9.

The only comparable antecedent to this plunge in births was in Shandong province in the early 1990s, where some party officials tried to launch a campaign to go "newborn-free in 100 days". By 2000, the population of 5-9 year olds in Tai'an, a city in Shandong, was only 28% the size of the cohort aged 10-14. Back in 1980, when Chinese authorities were discussing the one-child policy, there was even a creepy proposal to have a "newborn-free year" every few years.

To understand why Xinjiang's births have plummeted, it helps to review the history of population control in the province. China implemented family planning nationwide in 1973 and imposed the one-child policy in 1980. But for ethnic minorities in Xinjiang, family planning came later. Starting in 1989, minority urban couples in Xinjiang were allowed two children. Rural couples were allowed two as well, and were less likely to be forced to have sterilisations. Those "lenient" policies, combined with lagging education, led to higher fertility rates among Uighurs. For example, the national fertility rates in 1989, 2000, and 2010 were 2.3, 1.22, and 1.18 children per woman, respectively, and 4.31, 2.0, and 1.84 for Uighur women.

Mr Chen's predecessor, Zhang Chunxian, was keen on population control when he was CPC secretary of Hunan province from 2005 to 2010. Arguing that "to grasp family planning is to grasp productivity", he launched a campaign to strengthen family planning in Hunan in 2006. The campaign swept up my cousin-in-law, who was forced to abort her first child a few days before her due date because she had not applied for a birth permit in time.

In 2010, Mr Zhang was reassigned to Xinjiang, and Hunan's new governor, Xu Shousheng, arrived with plans to launch another campaign to strengthen population control in the province. In January 2011, I posted an "Open Letter to the Secretary and Governor of Hunan on Family Planning" online, euphemistically criticising Mr Zhang and Mr Xu. In response, the Hunan authorities invited me to lecture on the topic in Hunan, and Ilham Tohti, a Uighur economist and award-winning human-rights defender, joined me in calling for an end to family planning for the Uighurs.

Then, on July 31, 2014, Mr Zhang published an essay in the CPC journal Seeking Truth, arguing that Xinjiang must "implement a family-planning policy that is equal for all ethnic groups" and must "lower and stabilise fertility at a moderate level". I was so concerned that in March 2015, I published a peer-reviewed response in the journal Population and Society, entitled "The urgency of stopping population control in view of the low fertility rates of ethnic minorities".

In the event, Mr Zhang did not strengthen family planning in Xinjiang. Births in the province remained stable during his tenure. But we now know that, under Mr Chen's rule, births plummeted from 389,695 in 2017 to 267,250 in 2018, and to 159,528 in 2021, implying three-quarters of a million fewer births in 2018-21.

Since Chinese authorities have long been notorious for mandating abortion, sterilisation, and intrauterine devices, it is natural to assume that the dramatic decline in births in Xinjiang reflects such measures. But matters are not so simple, because there were slightly fewer abortions and IUDs in Xinjiang in 2017-20 than in 2013-16; and though there were 70,000 more sterilisations, that figure is still an order of magnitude smaller than the drop in births.

Given that couples in Xinjiang can legally have two or three children, it is unlikely the authorities forced abortions, ligations and IUDs on women who had only one or two children. Why, then, was the Uighur fertility rate in 2020 only one child per woman? Most likely, it is because Mr Chen's brutal crackdown undermined Uighur fertility habits (under the pretext of fighting Islamic extremism) and reduced the resources for parenting, through recession and unemployment.

Improved education has also contributed to the decline in births, by leading more women to delay childbearing. Chinese authorities have invested heavily to provide 15 years of free compulsory education in Xinjiang, compared with nine years nationwide. As a result, Xinjiang's high-school gross enrollment rate increased from 69% in 2010 to 99% in 2020, while the nationwide rate rose from 83% to just 91%.

While the Chinese authorities have been effective at lowering fertility rates, they have struggled to boost them. The recent "two-child" and "three-child" policies have been abject failures. Every effort to encourage procreation in Xinjiang will fail if the region's socioeconomic vitality continues to decline.

This failure will cause China to lose its geopolitical advantage in Central Asia, where it is in a struggle for influence with Russia.©2022 Project Syndicate


Yi Fuxian, a senior scientist in obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, is the author of 'Big Country with an Empty Nest' (China Development Press, 2013).

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