Collection

Special issue on Co** with Population Ageing

When a growing elderly population gets coupled with a low fertility rate, they become a challenge faced by many countries. By the end of 2021, China’s population aged 65 and above reached 200 million, accounting for more than 14.2% of the whole population, marking that China has entered a moderately aging society. Faced with this “aged boom”, how can the world’s most populous country change the world’s largest elderly population into a "longevity dividend"? It’s a major issue in China. In the world, Western Europe is the first region in the world to start population aging, and in Asia, Japan, Korea, Singapore and other countries have rich experience and lessons to share in co** with population ageing.

In this special issue, we are looking for papers on the theme of how can China learn from the world in co** with the population ageing. The papers can be theoretical, commentary or empirical contributions; full length or short descriptive. We would like to invite submissions that discuss experiences and lessons on co** with the population ageing, the effective approaches to cope with low fertility and population ageing. Comparative study across populations, or between Asia and Europe, would be encouraged when possible. Submissions can be focused on certain issues about co** with population ageing, such as active ageing policies, family policies, flexible retirement, social security and long term care insurance and services, digital inclusion and age-friendly society, or as case studies for a particular population or a region.

Articles will undergo all of the journal's standard peer review and editorial processes outlined in its submission guidelines. Reviewers will follow Springer Nature's and the journal's more detailed Peer-Review Policy.

Editors

  • Peng Du

    Professor, Vice President of Renmin University of China, China

Articles (6 in this collection)