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China
China
from Wikipedia

China,[h] officially the People's Republic of China (PRC),[i] is a country in East Asia. With a population exceeding 1.4 billion, it is the second-most populous country after India, representing 17% of the world population. China borders fourteen countries by land[j] across an area of 9.6 million square kilometers (3,700,000 sq mi), making it the third-largest country by area.[k] The country is divided into 33 province-level divisions: 22 provinces,[l] 5 autonomous regions, 4 municipalities, and 2 semi-autonomous special administrative regions. Beijing is the capital, while Shanghai is the most populous city by urban area and largest financial center.

Key Information

China saw the first humans in the region arriving during the Paleolithic era. By the 2nd millennium BCE dynastic states had emerged in the Yellow River basin. The 8th–3rd centuries BCE saw a breakdown in the authority of the Zhou dynasty, accompanied by the emergence of administrative and military techniques, literature and philosophy. In 221 BCE, China was unified under an emperor, ushering in two millennia of imperial dynasties. With the invention of gunpowder and paper, the establishment of the Silk Road, and the Great Wall, Chinese culture flourished and has heavily influenced its neighbors and lands further afield. China began to cede parts of the country in the 19th century, to European powers by a series of unequal treaties. The 1911 Revolution overthrew the Qing dynasty and the Republic of China (ROC) was established the following year. The country was unstable and fragmented during the Warlord Era, which ended upon the Northern Expedition conducted by the Kuomintang (KMT) to reunify the country. The Chinese Civil War began in 1927, when KMT forces purged members of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), who proceeded to engage in fighting against the KMT-led Nationalist government. Following invasion by the Japan in 1937, the CCP – under the leadership of Mao Zedong – and KMT formed the Second United Front to fight the Japanese. The Second Sino-Japanese War ended in a Chinese victory; however, the CCP and the KMT resumed their civil war.

In 1949, the resurgent Communists established control, proclaiming the People's Republic of China and forcing the Nationalist government to retreat to the island of Taiwan. The country was split, with both sides claiming to be the legitimate government. Following the implementation of land reforms, attempts by the PRC to realize communism failed: the Great Leap Forward was responsible for the Great Chinese Famine which resulted in millions of deaths, and the Cultural Revolution was a period of turmoil and persecution. Economic reforms that began in 1978 moved the country away from a socialist planned economy towards a market-based economy, spurring significant economic growth. A movement for increased democracy and political liberalization stalled after the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests and massacre.

China is a unitary communist state led by the CCP that self-designates as a socialist state. It is one of the five permanent members of the UN Security Council. It is a founding member of multilateral and regional organizations such as the AIIB, the Silk Road Fund, the New Development Bank, and the RCEP. It is a member of BRICS, the G20, APEC, the SCO, and the East Asia Summit. Making up around one-fifth of the world economy, the Chinese economy is the world's largest by PPP-adjusted GDP. China is the second-wealthiest country, albeit ranking poorly in measures of democracy and human rights. The country has been one of the fastest-growing economies and is the world's largest manufacturer and exporter, as well as the second-largest importer. China is a nuclear-weapon state with the world's largest standing army and the second-largest defense budget. It is described as either a potential or established superpower,[14][15][16] due to its influence in the fields of geopolitics, technology, manufacturing, economics and culture.[17][18][19][20] China is known for its cuisine and culture. It is a megadiverse country, and has 60 UNESCO World Heritage Sites.

Etymology

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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 used by the Chinese themselves during this period. Its origin has been traced through Portuguese, Malay, and Persian back to the Sanskrit word Cīna, used in ancient India.[21] "China" appears in Richard Eden's 1555 translation[m] of the 1516 journal of the Portuguese explorer Duarte Barbosa.[n][21] Barbosa's usage was derived from Persian Chīn (چین), which in turn derived from Sanskrit Cīna (चीन).[26] The origin of the Sanskrit word is a matter of debate.[21] Cīna was first used in early Hindu scripture, including the Mahabharata (3rd century BCE–4th century CE) and the Laws of Manu (2nd century BCE–2nd century CE).[27] In 1655, Martino Martini suggested that the word China is derived ultimately from the name of the Qin dynasty (221–206 BCE).[28][27] Although use in Indian sources precedes this dynasty, this derivation is still given in various sources.[29] Alternative suggestions include the names for Yelang and the Jing or Chu state.[27][30]

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" (中国; 中國; Zhōngguó), from zhōng ('central') and guó ('state'), a term which developed under the Western Zhou dynasty in reference to its royal demesne.[o][p] It was used in official documents as an synonym for the state under the Qing.[33] The name Zhongguo is also translated as 'Middle Kingdom' in English.[34] China is sometimes referred to as mainland China or "the Mainland" when distinguishing it from the Republic of China or the PRC's Special Administrative Regions.[35][36][37]

History

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Prehistory

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

Archaeological evidence suggests that early hominids inhabited China 2.25 million years ago.[38] The hominid fossils of Peking Man, a Homo erectus who used fire,[39] have been dated to between 680,000 and 780,000 years ago.[40] The fossilized teeth of Homo sapiens (dated to 125,000–80,000 years ago) have been discovered in Fuyan Cave.[41] Chinese proto-writing existed in Jiahu around 6600 BCE,[42] at Damaidi around 6000 BCE,[43] 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.[42]

Early dynastic rule

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

According to traditional Chinese historiography, the Xia dynasty was established during the late 3rd millennium BCE, marking the beginning of the dynastic cycle that was understood to underpin China's entire political history. In the modern era, the Xia's historicity came under increasing scrutiny, in part due to the earliest known attestation of the Xia being written millennia after the date given for their collapse. In 1958, archaeologists discovered sites belonging to the Erlitou culture that existed during the early Bronze Age; they have since been characterized as the remains of the historical Xia, but this conception is often rejected.[44][45][46] The Shang dynasty that traditionally succeeded the Xia is the earliest for which there are both contemporary written records and undisputed archaeological evidence.[47] The Shang ruled much of the Yellow River valley until the 11th century BCE, with the earliest hard evidence dated c. 1300 BCE.[48] The oracle bone script, attested from c. 1250 BCE but generally assumed to be considerably older,[49][50] represents the oldest known form of written Chinese,[51] and is the direct ancestor of modern Chinese characters.[52]

The Shang were overthrown by the Zhou, who ruled between the 11th and 5th centuries BCE, though the centralized authority of Son of Heaven was slowly eroded by fengjian lords. Some principalities eventually emerged from the weakened Zhou 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 seven major powerful states left.[53]

Imperial China

[edit]

Qin and Han

[edit]
The southward expansion of the Han dynasty during the 2nd century BCE

The Warring States period ended in 221 BCE after the state of Qin conquered the other six states, reunited China and established the dominant order of autocracy. King Zheng of Qin proclaimed himself the Emperor of the Qin dynasty, becoming the first emperor of a unified China. He enacted Qin's legalist reforms, notably the standardization of Chinese characters, measurements, road widths, and currency. His dynasty also conquered the Yue tribes in Guangxi, Guangdong, and Northern Vietnam.[54] The Qin dynasty lasted only fifteen years, falling soon after the First Emperor's death.[55][56]

Following widespread revolts during which the imperial library was burned,[q] the Han dynasty emerged to rule China between 206 BCE and 220 CE, creating a cultural identity among its populace still remembered in the ethnonym of the modern Han Chinese.[55][56] The Han expanded the empire's territory considerably, with military campaigns reaching Central Asia, Mongolia, 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.[58] 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.[59]

Three Kingdoms, Jin, Northern and Southern dynasties

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After the end of the Han dynasty, a period of strife known as Three Kingdoms followed, at the end of which 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 rebelled 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. 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.[citation needed]

Sui, Tang and Song

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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.[60][61] Under the succeeding Tang and Song dynasties, Chinese economy, technology, and culture entered a golden age.[62] The Tang dynasty retained control of the Western Regions and the Silk Road,[63] which brought traders to as far as Mesopotamia and the Horn of Africa,[64] 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.[65] 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 the Liao dynasty. The Song was the first government in world history to issue paper money and the first Chinese polity to establish a permanent navy which was supported by the developed shipbuilding industry along with the sea trade.[66]

Between the 10th and 11th century CE, the population of China doubled 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,[67] and a flourishing of philosophy and the arts, as landscape art and porcelain were brought to new levels of complexity.[68] However, the military weakness of the Song army was observed by the Jin dynasty. In 1127, Emperor Emeritus Huizong, Emperor Qinzong of Song and the capital Bianjing were captured during the Jin–Song wars. The remnants of the Song retreated to southern China and reestablished the Song at Jiankang.[69]

Yuan, Ming and Qing

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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 dates to the Ming dynasty.

The Mongol conquest of China began in 1205 with the campaigns against Western Xia by Genghis Khan,[70] who also invaded Jin territories.[71] 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.[72] A peasant named Zhu Yuanzhang 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.[73]

In the early Ming dynasty, China's capital was moved from Nanjing to Beijing. With the budding of capitalism, philosophers such as Wang Yangming critiqued and expanded Neo-Confucianism with concepts of individualism and equality of four occupations.[74] 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 Later Jin incursions led to an exhausted treasury.[75] 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.[76]

The Qing conquest of the Ming and expansion of the empire

The Qing dynasty, which lasted from 1644 until 1912, was the last imperial dynasty of China. The Ming-Qing transition (1618–1683) cost 25 million lives, but the Qing appeared to have restored China's imperial power and inaugurated another flowering of the arts.[77] After the Southern Ming ended, the further conquest of the Dzungar Khanate added Mongolia, Tibet and Xinjiang to the empire.[78] Meanwhile, China's population growth resumed and shortly began to accelerate. It is commonly agreed that pre-modern China's population experienced two growth spurts, one during the Northern Song period (960–1127), and other during the Qing period (around 1700–1830).[79] By the High Qing era China was possibly the most commercialized country in the world, and imperial China experienced a second commercial revolution by the end of the 18th century.[80] On the other hand, the centralized autocracy was strengthened in part to suppress anti-Qing sentiment with the policy of valuing agriculture and restraining commerce, like the Haijin during the early Qing period and ideological control as represented by the literary inquisition, causing some social and technological stagnation.[81][82]

Fall of the Qing dynasty

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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 Opium Wars with Britain and France forced China to pay compensation, open treaty ports, allow extraterritoriality for foreign nationals, and cede Hong Kong to the British[83] under the 1842 Treaty of Nanking, the first of what have been termed 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.[84] 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.[85]

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.[86] 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 known as the late Qing reforms, the Xinhai Revolution of 1911–1912 ended the Qing dynasty and established the Republic of China.[87] Puyi, the last Emperor, abdicated in 1912.[88]

Establishment of the Republic and World War II

[edit]

On 1 January 1912, the Republic of China was established, and Sun Yat-sen of the Kuomintang (KMT) was proclaimed provisional president.[89] 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.[90] 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.[91][92] During this period, China participated in World War I and saw a far-reaching popular uprising (the May Fourth Movement).[93]

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

In the late 1920s, the Kuomintang under Chiang Kai-shek 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.[94][95] 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 Three Principles of the People program for transforming China into a modern democratic state.[96][97] The Kuomintang briefly allied with the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) during the Northern Expedition, though the alliance broke down in 1927 after Chiang violently suppressed the CCP and other leftists in Shanghai, marking the beginning of the Chinese Civil War.[98] The CCP declared areas of the country as the Chinese Soviet Republic (Jiangxi Soviet) in November 1931 in Ruijin, Jiangxi. The Jiangxi Soviet was wiped out by the KMT armies in 1934, leading the CCP to initiate the Long March and relocate to Yan'an in Shaanxi. It would be the base of the communists before major combat in the Chinese Civil War ended in 1949.

In 1931, Japan invaded and occupied Manchuria. Japan invaded other parts of China in 1937, precipitating the Second Sino-Japanese War (1937–1945), a theater of World War II. The war forced an uneasy alliance between the Kuomintang and the CCP. Japanese forces committed numerous war atrocities against the civilian population; as many as 20 million Chinese civilians died.[99] An estimated 40,000 to 300,000 Chinese were massacred in Nanjing alone during the Japanese occupation.[100] China, along with the UK, the United States, and the Soviet Union, were recognized as the Allied "Big Four" in the Declaration by United Nations.[101][102] 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.[103][104] After the surrender of Japan in 1945, Taiwan, along with the Penghu, were handed over to Chinese control; however, the validity of this handover is controversial.[105]

People's Republic

[edit]
The founding ceremony of the People's Republic of China was held at 3:00 pm on 1 October 1949. The picture above shows Mao Zedong's announcement of the founding of the People's Republic of China in Tiananmen Square.[106]

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.[105] Afterwards, the CCP took control of most of mainland China, and the ROC government retreated offshore to Taiwan.

On 1 October 1949, CCP Chairman Mao Zedong formally proclaimed the People's Republic of China in Tiananmen Square, Beijing.[107] In 1950, the PRC captured Hainan from the ROC[108] and annexed Tibet.[109] However, remaining Kuomintang forces continued to wage an insurgency in western China throughout the 1950s.[110] The CCP consolidated its popularity among the peasants through the Land Reform Movement, which included the state-tolerated executions of between 1 and 2 million landlords by peasants and former tenants.[111] Though the PRC initially allied closely with the Soviet Union, the relations between the two communist nations gradually deteriorated, leading China to develop an independent industrial system and its own nuclear weapons.[112]

The Chinese population increased from 550 million in 1950 to 900 million in 1974.[113] The historical consensus is that the policies of the Mao-era significantly reduced poverty.[114] However, the Great Leap Forward, an idealistic massive industrialization project, resulted in an estimated 15 to 55 million deaths between 1959 and 1961, mostly from starvation.[115][116] In 1964, China detonated its first atomic bomb.[117] 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 ROC in the United Nations, and took its seat as a permanent member of the Security Council.[118]

The 1989 Tiananmen Square protests was ended by a military-led massacre.

After Mao's death, the Gang of Four were arrested by Hua Guofeng and held responsible for the Cultural Revolution. The Cultural Revolution was rebuked, with millions rehabilitated. Deng Xiaoping took power in 1978, and started the reform and opening up, instituting large-scale political and economic reforms, together with the "Eight Elders", most senior and influential members of the party. The government loosened its control and the communes were gradually disbanded.[119] Agricultural collectivization was dismantled and farmlands privatized. While foreign trade became a major focus, special economic zones (SEZs) were created. Inefficient state-owned enterprises (SOEs) were restructured and some closed. This marked China's transition away from planned economy.[120] China adopted its current constitution on 4 December 1982.[121]

In 1989, there were protests such those in Tiananmen Square, and then throughout the entire nation.[122] Jiang Zemin was elevated to become the CCP general secretary, becoming the paramount leader. Jiang continued economic reforms, closing many SOEs and trimming down "iron rice bowl" (life-tenure positions).[123][124][125] China's economy grew sevenfold during this time.[123] British Hong Kong and Portuguese Macau returned to China in 1997 and 1999, respectively, as special administrative regions under the principle of one country, two systems. The country joined the World Trade Organization in 2001.[123]

At the 16th CCP National Congress in 2002, Hu Jintao succeeded Jiang as the general secretary.[123] Under Hu, China maintained its high rate of economic growth, overtaking the United Kingdom, France, Germany and Japan to become the world's second-largest economy.[126] However, the growth also severely impacted the country's resources and environment,[127][128] and caused major social displacement.[129][130] Xi Jinping succeeded Hu as paramount leader at the 18th CCP National Congress in 2012. Shortly after his ascension to power, Xi launched a vast anti-corruption crackdown,[131] that prosecuted more than 2 million officials by 2022.[132] During his tenure, Xi has consolidated power unseen since the initiation of economic and political reforms.[133]

Geography

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Topographic map of China

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.

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.[134] 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.[135]

Despite spanning the equivalent of five geographical timezones (from UTC+5 to UTC+9), China uses a single national time zone, China Standard Time (UTC+8).[136][137] This uniform time policy was adopted in 1949.[136]

Climate

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Köppen-Geiger climate classification map for mainland China[138]

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.[139]

A major environmental issue in China is the continued expansion of its deserts, particularly the Gobi Desert.[140] 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. 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.[141] 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.[142] With current policies, the GHG emissions of China will probably peak in 2025, and by 2030 they will return to 2022 levels. However, such pathway still leads to three-degree temperature rise.[143]

Official government statistics about Chinese agricultural productivity are considered unreliable, due to exaggeration of production at subsidiary government levels.[144][145] 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.[146] In 2021, 12 percent of global permanent meadows and pastures belonged to China, as well as 8% of global cropland.[147]

Biodiversity

[edit]
A giant panda, China's most famous endangered and endemic species, at the Chengdu Panda Base in Sichuan

China is one of 17 megadiverse countries,[148] 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.[149] The country is a party to the Convention on Biological Diversity;[150] its National Biodiversity Strategy and Action Plan was received by the convention in 2010.[151]

China is home to at least 551 species of mammals (the third-highest in the world),[152] 1,221 species of birds (eighth),[153] 424 species of reptiles (seventh)[154] and 333 species of amphibians (seventh).[155] Wildlife in China shares habitat with, and bears acute pressure from, one of the world's largest population of humans. At least 840 animal species are threatened, vulnerable or in danger of local extinction, due mainly to human activity such as habitat destruction, pollution and poaching for food, fur and traditional Chinese medicine.[156] 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.[157] 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.[158][159] The Baiji was confirmed extinct on 12 December 2006.[160]

China has over 32,000 species of vascular plants,[161] 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.[162] 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, contain a quarter of all the animal and plant species found in China.[162] China has over 10,000 recorded species of fungi.[163]

Environment

[edit]
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.[164][165] Regulations such as the 1979 Environmental Protection Law are fairly stringent, though they are poorly enforced, frequently disregarded in favor of rapid economic development.[166] China has the second-highest death toll because of air pollution, after India, with approximately 1 million deaths.[167][168] Although China ranks as the highest CO2 emitting country,[169] 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).[170] Greenhouse gas emissions by China are the world's largest.[170] The country has significant water pollution problems; only 89.4% of China's national surface water was graded suitable for human consumption by the Ministry of Ecology and Environment in 2023.[171]

China has prioritized clamping down on pollution, bringing a significant decrease in air pollution in the 2010s.[172] In 2020, the Chinese government announced its aims for the country to reach its peak emissions levels before 2030, and achieve carbon neutrality by 2060 in line with the Paris Agreement,[173] which, according to Climate Action Tracker, 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".[173] According to China's government, the forest coverage of the country grew from 10% of the overall territory in 1949 to 25% in 2024.[174]

China is the world's leading investor in renewable energy and its commercialization, with $546 billion invested in 2022;[175] it the world's leading manufacturer of renewable energy technologies and invests heavily in local-scale renewable energy projects.[176][175][177] Long heavily relying on non-renewable energy sources such as coal, China's adaptation of renewable energy has increased significantly in recent years.[178] In 2024, 58.2% of China's electricity came from coal (largest producer in the world), 13.5% from hydroelectric power (largest), 9.8% from wind (largest), 8.3% from solar energy (largest), 4.4% from nuclear energy (second-largest), 3% from natural gas (fifth-largest), and 2.1% from bioenergy (largest); in total, 38% of China's energy came from clean energy sources.[179] 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.[180][181]

Political geography

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

China is the third-largest country in the world by land area after Russia, and the third- or fourth-largest country in the world by total area.[r] China's total area is generally stated as being approximately 9,600,000 km2 (3,700,000 sq mi).[182] Specific area figures range from 9,572,900 km2 (3,696,100 sq mi) according to the Encyclopædia Britannica,[12] to 9,596,961 km2 (3,705,407 sq mi) according to the UN Demographic Yearbook,[5] and The World Factbook.[4]

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.[4] China borders 14 nations and covers the bulk of East Asia, bordering Vietnam, Laos, and Myanmar in Southeast Asia; India, Bhutan, Nepal, Pakistan[s] and Afghanistan 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.[183]

China has resolved its land borders with 12 out of 14 neighboring countries, having pursued substantial compromises in most of them.[184][185][186] China currently has a disputed land border with India[187] and Bhutan.[188] China is additionally involved in maritime disputes with multiple countries over territory in the East and South China Seas, such as the Senkaku Islands and the entirety of South China Sea Islands.[189][190]

Government and politics

[edit]

The People's Republic of China is a communist state governed by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). The CCP is officially guided by socialism with Chinese characteristics, which is Marxism adapted to Chinese circumstances.[191] The Chinese constitution states that the PRC "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 defining feature of socialism with Chinese characteristics is the leadership of the Chinese Communist Party."[192][193]

The PRC officially characterizes itself as a democracy—more specifically, a whole-process people's democracy.[194] However, the country is commonly described as an authoritarian one-party state and a dictatorship,[195][196] with some of the world's heaviest restrictions in many civil areas, most notably against freedom of the press, freedom of assembly, free formation of social organizations, freedom of religion and free access to the Internet.[197] China has consistently been ranked amongst the lowest as an "authoritarian regime" by the Economist Intelligence Unit's Democracy Index, ranking at 145th out of 167 countries in 2024.[198] Other sources suggest that terming China as "authoritarian" does not sufficiently account for the multiple consultation mechanisms that exist in the Chinese governmental system.[199]

Chinese Communist Party

[edit]
The Chinese Communist Party is the founding and governing political party of the People's Republic of China.

The CCP is the founding and sole ruling party of the PRC. According to the CCP constitution, the CCP's highest body is the National Congress held every five years.[200] The National Congress elects the Central Committee, who then elects the party's Politburo, Politburo Standing Committee and the general secretary (party leader), the top leadership of the country.[200] The general secretary holds ultimate power and authority over party and state and serves as the informal paramount leader.[201] The current general secretary is Xi Jinping, who took office on 15 November 2012.[202] 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.[203]

Government

[edit]

The government in China is under the sole control of the CCP.[204] The CCP controls appointments in government bodies, with most senior government officials being CCP members.[204]

The National People's Congress (NPC), with nearly 3,000-members, as the highest organ of state power holds the unified powers of the state,[193] though observers often describe it as a "rubber stamp" body.[205] The NPC meets annually, while the NPC Standing Committee, around 150 members elected from NPC delegates, meets every couple of months.[205] Elections are indirect and not pluralistic, with nominations at all levels being controlled by the CCP.[194] The NPC is dominated by the CCP, with another eight minor parties having nominal representation under the condition of upholding CCP leadership.[206]

The NPC elects the president. The presidency is the ceremonial state representative, not the constitutional head of state. 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 and supreme commander of the armed forces. The premier is the head of government, with Li Qiang being the incumbent. 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 Politburo Standing Committee (PSC). The premier presides over the State Council, China's cabinet, composed of four vice premiers, state councillors, and the heads of ministries and commissions.[193] 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, CPPCCs have subdivisions; the National Committee of the CPPCC is chaired by Wang Huning, the fourth-ranking member of the PSC.[207]

The governance of China is characterized by a high degree of political centralization but significant economic decentralization.[208]: 7  Policy instruments or processes are often tested locally before being applied more widely, resulting in a policy that involves experimentation and feedback.[209]: 14  Generally, central government leadership refrains from drafting specific policies, instead using the informal networks and site visits to affirm or suggest changes to the direction of local policy experiments or pilot programs.[210]: 71  The typical approach is that central government leadership begins drafting formal policies, law, or regulations after policy has been developed at local levels.[210]: 71 

Administrative divisions

[edit]

The PRC is constitutionally a unitary state divided into 23 provinces,[t] five autonomous regions (each with a designated minority group), four direct-administered municipalities—collectively referred to as "mainland China"—as well as the special administrative regions (SARs) of Hong Kong and Macau.[211] The PRC 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, even though all these territories are governed by the Republic of China (ROC).[212][37] Geographically, all 31 provincial divisions of mainland China can be grouped into six regions: North China, East China, Southwestern China, South Central China, Northeast China, and Northwestern China.[213]

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
List of administrative divisions in the PRC
Provinces ()
Claimed Province

Taiwan (台湾省), governed by the Republic of China

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

[edit]
Diplomatic relations of China

The PRC has diplomatic relations with 179 United Nations member-states and maintains embassies in 174. As of 2024, China has one of the largest diplomatic networks of any country in the world.[214] In 1971, the PRC replaced the ROC as the sole representative of China in the United Nations and as one of the five permanent members of the United Nations Security Council.[215] It is a member of intergovernmental organizations including the G20,[216] the SCO,[217] the BRICS,[218] the East Asia Summit,[219] and the APEC.[220] China is also a former member and leader of the Non-Aligned Movement and still considers itself an advocate for developing countries.[221]

The PRC officially maintains the one China principle: the view that there is only one sovereign state with the name "China"—represented by the PRC—and that Taiwan is part of that China.[222] The unique status of Taiwan has led to countries formally recognizing the PRC to maintain unique "one China policies" that differ from each other; some countries explicitly recognize the PRC's claim over Taiwan, while others, including the U.S. and Japan, only acknowledge the claim.[222] Chinese officials have protested on numerous occasions when foreign countries have made diplomatic overtures to Taiwan,[223] especially in the matter of armament sales.[224] Most countries have switched recognition from the ROC to the PRC since the latter replaced the former in the UN in 1971.[225]

Chinese President Xi Jinping at the 16th BRICS summit in Kazan, Russia, 23 October 2024

Much of current Chinese foreign policy is reportedly based on Premier Zhou Enlai's Five Principles of Peaceful Coexistence, as well as by the concept of "harmony without uniformity", which encourages diplomatic relations between states despite ideological differences.[226] This policy may have led China to support or maintain close ties with states that are regarded as dangerous and repressive by Western nations, such as Sudan,[227] North Korea and Iran.[228] China's close relationship with Myanmar has involved support for its ruling governments as well as for its ethnic rebel groups,[229] including the Arakan Army.[230] China has a close political, economic and military relationship with Russia,[231] and the two states often vote in unison in the UN Security Council.[232][233] China provided Russia with economic and diplomatic support during the Russo-Ukrainian War.[234][235] China's relationship with the United States is complex, and includes deep trade ties but significant political differences.[236]

Since the early 2000s, China has followed a policy of engaging with African nations for trade and bilateral co-operation.[237][238][239] It maintains extensive and highly diversified trade links with the European Union, and became its largest trading partner for goods.[240] China is increasing its influence in Central Asia[241] and South Pacific.[242] The country has strong trade ties with ASEAN countries[243] and major South American economies,[244] and is the largest trading partner of Brazil, Chile, Peru, Uruguay, Argentina, and several others.[245]

In 2013, China initiated the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), a large global infrastructure building initiative with funding on the order of $50–100 billion per year.[246] BRI could be one of the largest development plans in modern history.[247] It expanded significantly over the next six years and, as of April 2020, included 138 countries and 30 international organizations. In addition to intensifying foreign policy relations, the focus is particularly on building efficient transport routes, especially the maritime Silk Road with its connections to East Africa and Europe. However many loans made under the program are unsustainable and China has faced a number of calls for debt relief from debtor nations.[248][249]

Military

[edit]
China Victory Day Parade on September 3, 2025, the day of Victory over Japan

The People's Liberation Army (PLA) is considered one of the world's most powerful militaries and has rapidly modernized in the recent decades.[250] Since 2024, it consists of four services: the Ground Force (PLAGF), the Navy (PLAN), the Air Force (PLAAF) and the Rocket Force (PLARF). It also has four independent arms: the Aerospace Force, the Cyberspace Force, the Information Support Force, and the Joint Logistics Support Force, the first three of which were split from the disbanded Strategic Support Force (PLASSF).[251] 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,[252][253] and the world's second-largest navy by tonnage.[254]

Chengdu J-20 5th generation stealth fighter

China's official military budget for 2024 totalled US$229 billion (1.67 trillion Yuan), the second-largest in the world, though SIPRI estimates that its real expenditure that year was US$314 billion, making up 12% of global military spending and accounting for 1.7% of the country's GDP.[255] 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.[256]

Sociopolitical issues and human rights

[edit]

The situation of human rights in China has attracted significant criticism from foreign governments, foreign press agencies, and non-governmental organizations, alleging widespread civil rights violations such as detention without trial, forced confessions, torture, restrictions of fundamental rights, and excessive use of the death penalty.[197][257] Since its inception, Freedom House has ranked China as "not free" in its Freedom in the World survey,[197] while Amnesty International has documented significant human rights abuses.[257] The Chinese constitution 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.[258][259] China has limited protections regarding LGBT rights.[260] Although some criticisms of government policies and the ruling CCP are tolerated, censorship of political speech and information are amongst the harshest in the world and routinely used to prevent collective action.[261] The government suppresses popular protests and demonstrations that it considers a potential threat to "social stability".[262] China additionally uses a massive surveillance network of cameras, facial recognition software, sensors, and surveillance of personal technology as a means of social control of persons living in the country.[196]

In Xinjiang, China has been accused of committing genocide against Uyghurs and detaining more than one million Uyghurs and other ethnic minorities in camps.[263]
2019–20 Hong Kong protests

China is regularly accused of large-scale repression and human rights abuses in Tibet and Xinjiang,[264][265][266] where significant numbers of ethnic minorities reside, including violent police crackdowns and religious suppression.[267][268] Since 2017, the Chinese government has been engaged in a harsh crackdown in Xinjiang, with around one million Uyghurs and other ethnic and religion minorities being detained in internment camps aimed at changing the political thinking of detainees, their identities, and their religious beliefs.[269] According to Western reports, political indoctrination, torture, physical and psychological abuse, forced sterilization, sexual abuse, and forced labor are common in these facilities.[270] According to a 2020 Foreign Policy report, China's treatment of Uyghurs meets the UN definition of genocide,[271] while a separate UN Human Rights Office report said they could potentially meet the definitions for crimes against humanity.[272] The Chinese authorities have also cracked down on dissent in Hong Kong, especially after the passage of a national security law in 2020.[273]

In 2017 and 2020, the Pew Research Center ranked the severity of Chinese government restrictions on religion as being among the world's highest, despite ranking religious-related social hostilities in China as low in severity.[274][275] The Global Slavery Index estimated that in 2016 more than 3.8 million people (0.25% of the population) were living in "conditions of modern slavery", including victims of human trafficking, forced labor, forced marriage, child labor, and state-imposed forced labor. The state-imposed re-education through labor (laojiao) system was formally abolished in 2013, but it is not clear to what extent its practices have stopped.[276] The much larger reform through labor (laogai) system includes labor prison factories, detention centers, and re-education camps; the Laogai Research Foundation has estimated in June 2008 that there were nearly 1,422 of these facilities, though it cautioned that this number was likely an underestimate.[277]

Public views of government

[edit]

Political concerns in China include the growing gap between rich and poor and government corruption.[278] Nonetheless, international surveys show the Chinese public have a high level of satisfaction with their government.[208]: 137  These views are generally attributed to the material comforts and security available to large segments of the Chinese populace as well as the government's attentiveness and responsiveness.[208] : 136  According to the World Values Survey (2022), 91% of Chinese respondents have significant confidence in their government.[208]: 13  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 in the survey's history.[279]

Economy

[edit]
Skyline of Lujiazui in Shanghai

China has the world's second-largest economy in terms of nominal GDP,[280] and the world's largest in terms of purchasing power parity (PPP).[281] As of 2022, China accounts for around 18% of the global economy by nominal GDP.[282] China is one of the world's fastest-growing major economies,[283] with its economic growth having been almost consistently above 5 percent since the introduction of the reform and opening up policy in 1978.[284] According to the World Bank, China's GDP grew from $150 billion in 1978 to $18.74 trillion by 2024.[285] It ranks 64th by nominal GDP per capita, making it an upper-middle income country.[286] Of the world's 500 largest companies, 135 are headquartered in China.[287] As of at least 2024, China has the world's second-largest equity markets and futures markets, as well as the third-largest bond market.[288]: 153 

China was one of the world's foremost economic powers throughout the arc of East Asian and global history. The country had one of the largest economies in the world for most of the past two millennia,[289] during which it has seen cycles of prosperity and decline.[58][290] 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[291]Shanghai, Hong Kong and Shenzhen—that together have a market capitalization of over $15.9 trillion, as of October 2020.[292] China has three out of the world's ten most competitive financial centers according to the 2024 Global Financial Centres IndexShanghai, Hong Kong, and Shenzhen.[293]

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.[294]

Modern-day China is often described as an example of state capitalism or party-state capitalism.[295][296] 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.[297][298][299] According to official statistics, privately owned companies constitute more than 60% of China's GDP.[300]

China has been the world's largest manufacturing nation since 2010, after overtaking the U.S., which had been the largest for the previous hundred years.[301][302] China has also been the second-largest in high-tech manufacturing country since 2012, according to US National Science Foundation.[303] China is the second-largest retail market after the United States.[304] China leads the world in e-commerce, accounting for over 37% of the global market share in 2021.[305] The Chinese automotive industry is regarded as one of the most competitive and innovative in the world.[177] China is the world's leader in electric vehicle consumption and production, manufacturing and buying half of all the plug-in electric cars (BEV and PHEV) in the world as of 2022.[306] China is also the leading producer of batteries for electric vehicles as well as several key raw materials for batteries.[307]

Tourism

[edit]
The Forbidden City is one of the most popular tourist attractions in the world
The Forbidden City is one of the most popular tourist attractions in the world.

China received 65.7 million international visitors in 2019,[308] and in 2018 was the fourth-most-visited country in the world.[308] It also experiences an enormous volume of domestic tourism; Chinese tourists made an estimated 6 billion travels within the country in 2019.[309] China hosts the world's second-largest number of World Heritage Sites (60) after Italy, and is one of the most popular tourist destinations (first in the Asia-Pacific).

Wealth

[edit]

China accounted for 18.6% of the world's total wealth in 2022, second highest in the world after the U.S.[310] China brought more people out of extreme poverty than any other country in history[311][312]—between 1978 and 2018, China reduced extreme poverty by 800 million.[208]: 23  From 1990 to 2018, the proportion of the Chinese population living with an income of less than $1.90 per day (2011 PPP) decreased from 66.3% to 0.3%, the share living with an income of less than $3.20 per day from 90.0% to 2.9%, and the share living with an income of less than $5.50 per day decreased from 98.3% to 17.0%.[313]

From 1978 to 2018, the average standard of living multiplied by a factor of twenty-six.[314] Wages in China have grown significantly in the last 40 years—real (inflation-adjusted) wages grew seven-fold from 1978 to 2007.[315] Per capita incomes have also 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.[314] China's development is highly uneven; its major cities and coastal areas are far more prosperous than its rural and interior regions.[316] It has a high level of economic inequality,[317] which has increased quickly since the economic reforms.[318] Income inequality decreased in the 2010s,[319] and China's Gini coefficient was 0.357 in 2021.[10]

In March 2024, China ranked second in the world, after the U.S., in total number of billionaires and total number of millionaires, with 473 Chinese billionaires[320] and 6.2 million millionaires.[310] In 2019, China overtook the U.S. 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.[321][322] China had 85 female billionaires as of January 2021, two-thirds of the global total.[323] China has had the world's largest middle-class population since 2015;[324] the middle-class grew to 500 million by 2024.[325]

China in the global economy

[edit]
The BYD Song Plus, a compact crossover SUV manufactured by BYD Auto. China is the largest producer of motor vehicles in the world.[326]

China has been a member of the WTO since 2001 and is the world's largest trading power.[327] By 2016, China was the largest trading partner of 124 countries.[328] China became the world's largest trading nation in 2013 by the sum of imports and exports, as well as the world's largest commodity importer, accounting for roughly 45% of maritime's dry-bulk market.[329][330]

China's foreign exchange reserves reached US$3.246 trillion as of March 2024, making its reserves by far the world's largest.[331] In 2022, China was amongst the world's largest recipient of inward foreign direct investment (FDI), attracting $180 billion, though most of these were speculated to be from Hong Kong.[332] China also invests abroad, with a total outward FDI of $147.9 billion in 2023,[333] and a number of major takeovers of foreign firms by Chinese companies.[334]

Economists have argued that the renminbi is undervalued, due to currency intervention from the Chinese government, giving China an unfair trade advantage.[335] The Chinese government has promoted the internationalization of the renminbi in order to wean itself off its dependence on the U.S. dollar as a result of perceived weaknesses of the international monetary system.[336] The renminbi is a component of the IMF's special drawing rights and the world's fourth-most traded currency as of 2023.[337] However, partly due to capital controls that make the renminbi fall short of being a fully convertible currency, it remains far behind the Euro, the U.S. Dollar and the Japanese Yen in international trade volumes.[338] China has also been widely criticized for manufacturing large quantities of counterfeit goods.[339][340] In 2023, Harvard University's Economic Complexity Index ranked complexity of China's exports 16th in the world, up from 24th in 2010.[341]

Science and technology

[edit]

Historical

[edit]
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.[342] Ancient and medieval 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.[343][344] By the 17th century, the Western World surpassed China in scientific and technological advancement.[345] The causes of this early modern Great Divergence continue to be debated by scholars.[346]

After repeated military defeats by the European colonial powers and Imperial 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.[347] After Mao's death in 1976, science and technology were promoted as one of the Four Modernizations,[348] and the Soviet-inspired academic system was gradually reformed.[349]

Modern era

[edit]

Since the end of the Cultural Revolution, China has made significant investments in scientific research[350] and is quickly catching up with the U.S. in R&D spending.[351][352] China officially spent around 2.7% of its GDP on R&D in 2024, totaling to around $496 billion.[353] According to the World Intellectual Property Indicators, China received more applications than the U.S. did in 2018 and 2019 and ranked first globally in patents, utility models, trademarks, industrial designs, and creative goods exports in 2021.[354][355][356] It was ranked 10th[357][358] in the Global Innovation Index in 2025, a considerable improvement from its rank of 35th in 2013.[359][360] Chinese supercomputers are ranked among the fastest in the world.[361][u] Its efforts to develop the most advanced semiconductors and jet engines have seen delays and setbacks.[362][363]

China is developing its education system with an emphasis on science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM).[364] Its academic publication apparatus became the world's largest publisher of scientific papers in 2016.[365][366][367] In 2022, China overtook the US in the Nature Index, which measures the share of published articles in leading scientific journals.[368][369]

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

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.[370]

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 2023, eighteen Chinese nationals have journeyed into space, including two women. In 2011, China launched its first space station testbed, Tiangong-1.[371] In 2013, a Chinese robotic rover Yutu successfully touched down on the lunar surface as part of the Chang'e 3 mission.[372]

In 2019, China became the first country to land a probe—Chang'e 4—on the far side of the Moon.[373] In 2020, Chang'e 5 successfully returned Moon samples to the Earth, making China the third country to do so independently.[374] In 2021, China became the third country to land a spacecraft on Mars and the second one to deploy a rover (Zhurong) on Mars.[375] China completed its own modular space station, the Tiangong, in low Earth orbit on 3 November 2022.[376][377][378] On 29 November 2022, China performed its first in-orbit crew handover aboard the Tiangong.[379][380]

In May 2023, China announced a plan to land humans on the Moon by 2030.[381] To that end, China has been developing a lunar-capable super-heavy launcher, the Long March 10, a new crewed spacecraft, and a crewed lunar lander.[382][383] China sent Chang'e 6 on 3 May 2024, which conducted the first lunar sample return from Apollo Basin on the far side of the Moon.[384] This is China's second lunar sample return mission, the first was achieved by Chang'e 5 from the lunar near side 4 years ago.[385] It also carried a Chinese rover called Jinchan to conduct infrared spectroscopy of lunar surface and imaged Chang'e 6 lander on lunar surface.[386]

Infrastructure

[edit]

After a decades-long infrastructural boom,[387] China has produced numerous world-leading infrastructural projects: it has the largest high-speed rail network,[388] the most supertall skyscrapers,[389] the largest power plant (the Three Gorges Dam),[390] the most extensive ultra-high-voltage transmission network and innovation infrastructure,[391][392] and a global satellite navigation system with the largest number of satellites.[393]

Telecommunications

[edit]
China Mobile built a 5G station to cover summit of Mount Everest in 2020

China is the largest telecom market in the world and currently has the largest number of active cellphones of any country, with over 1.7 billion subscribers, as of February 2023. It has the largest number of internet and broadband users, with over 1.1 billion Internet users as of December 2024—equivalent to around 78.6% of its population.[394] By 2018, China had more than 1 billion 4G users, accounting for 40% of world's total.[395] China is making rapid advances in 5G—by late 2018, China had started large-scale and commercial 5G trials.[396] As of December 2023, China had over 810 million 5G users and 3.38 million base stations installed.[397]

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.[398] Combined, the three operators had over 3.4 million 4G base-stations in China.[399] Several Chinese telecommunications companies, most notably Huawei and ZTE, have been accused of spying for the Chinese military.[400]

China has developed its own satellite navigation system, dubbed BeiDou, which began offering commercial navigation services across Asia in 2012[401] as well as global services by the end of 2018.[402] Beidou followed GPS and GLONASS as the third completed global navigation satellite.[403]

Transport

[edit]
The Huajiang Canyon Bridge is the highest bridge in the world.
A Fuxing high-speed train running near the Beijing CBD

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 2022, China's highways had reached a total length of 177,000 km (110,000 mi), making it the longest highway system in the world.[404] China has the world's largest market for automobiles,[405][406] having surpassed the United States in both auto sales and production. The country is the world's largest exporter of cars by number as of 2023.[407][408] A side-effect of the rapid growth of China's road network has been a significant rise in traffic accidents.[409] In urban areas, bicycles remain a common mode of transport, despite the increasing prevalence of automobiles – as of 2023, there are approximately 200 million bicycles in China.[410]

China's railways, which are operated by the state-owned China State Railway Group Company, 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.[411] As of 2023, the country had 159,000 km (98,798 mi) of railways, the second-longest network in the world.[412] The railways strain to meet enormous demand particularly during the Chinese New Year holiday, when the world's largest annual human migration takes place.[413] China's high-speed rail (HSR) system started construction in the early 2000s. By the end of 2024, high speed rail in China had reached 48,000 kilometers (29,826 miles) of dedicated lines alone, making it the longest HSR network in the world.[414] 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 3.3 billion passengers in 2024, it is the world's busiest.[415] The network includes the Beijing–Guangzhou 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.[416] The Shanghai maglev train, which reaches 431 km/h (268 mph), is the fastest commercial train service in the world.[417] Since 2000, the growth of rapid transit systems in Chinese cities has accelerated.[418] As of December 2023, 55 Chinese cities have urban mass transit systems in operation.[419] 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.

The civil aviation industry in China is mostly state-dominated, with the Chinese government retaining a majority stake in the majority of Chinese airlines. The top three airlines in China are Air China, China Southern Airlines, and China Eastern Airlines,[420] which collectively made up 71% of the market in 2018, are all state-owned. Air travel has expanded rapidly in the last decades, with the number of passengers increasing from 16.6 million in 1990 to 551.2 million in 2017.[421] China had approximately 259 airports in 2024.[422]

China has over 2,000 river and seaports, about 130 of which are open to foreign shipping.[423] Of the fifty busiest container ports, 18 are located in China, of which the busiest is the Port of Shanghai, also the busiest port in the world.[424] The country's inland waterways are the world's sixth-longest, and total 27,700 km (17,212 mi).[425]

Water supply and sanitation

[edit]

Water supply and sanitation infrastructure in China is facing challenges such as rapid urbanization, as well as water scarcity, contamination, and pollution.[426] According to the Joint Monitoring Program for Water Supply and Sanitation, 93% of rural households had access to basic sanitation in 2022 (up from 77% in 2015).[427] The ongoing South–North Water Transfer Project intends to abate water shortage in the north.[428]

Demographics

[edit]
Population density map of the People's Republic of China (2000)

The 2020 Chinese census recorded the population as approximately 1,411,778,724. About 17.95% were 14 years old or younger, 63.35% were between 15 and 59 years old, and 18.7% were over 60 years old.[429] Between 2010 and 2020, the average population growth rate was 0.53%.[429]

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.[430] 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.[431] In 2016, the one-child policy was replaced in favor of a two-child policy.[432] A three-child policy was announced on 31 May 2021, due to population aging,[432] and in July 2021, all family size limits as well as penalties for exceeding them were removed.[433] In 2023, the total fertility rate was reported to be 1.09, ranking among the lowest in the world.[434] In 2023, National Bureau of Statistics estimated that the population fell 850,000 from 2021 to 2022, the first decline since 1961.[435]

According to one group of scholars, one-child limits had little effect on population growth[436] or total population size.[437] However, these scholars have been challenged.[438] The policy, along with traditional preference for boys, may have contributed to an imbalance in the sex ratio at birth.[439][440] The 2020 census found that males accounted for 51.2% of the total population.[441] However, China's sex ratio is more balanced than it was in 1953, when males accounted for 51.8% of the population.[442]

Urbanization

[edit]
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 67% in 2024.[443][444][445] China has over 160 cities with a population of over one million,[446] including the 18 megacities as of 2024[447][448] (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, Changsha and Hefei.[449][450] The total permanent population of Chongqing, Shanghai, Beijing and Chengdu is above 20 million.[451] Shanghai is China's most populous urban area[452][453] while Chongqing is its largest city proper, the only city in China with a permanent population of over 30 million.[1] The figures in the table below are from the 2020 census, and are only estimates of the urban populations within administrative city limits; a different ranking exists for total municipal populations. The large "floating populations" of migrant workers make conducting censuses in urban areas difficult;[454] the figures below include only long-term residents.

 
Largest cities or municipalities in China
China Urban Construction Statistical Yearbook 2020 Urban Population and Urban Temporary Population [455][note 1][note 2]
Rank Name Province Pop. Rank Name Province Pop.
1 Shanghai SH 24,281,400 11 Hong Kong HK 7,448,900
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[456]
  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.[457] Total urban population of all 26 districts of Chongqing are up to 15,076,600.

Ethnic groups

[edit]
Ethnolinguistic map of China in 1967

China legally recognizes 56 distinct ethnic groups, who comprise the Zhonghua minzu. The largest of these nationalities are the Han Chinese, who constitute more than 91% of the total population.[429] The Han Chinese – the world's largest single ethnic group[458] – outnumber other ethnic groups in every place excluding Tibet, Xinjiang,[459] Linxia,[460] and autonomous prefectures like Xishuangbanna.[461] Ethnic minorities account for less than 10% of the population of China, according to the 2020 census.[429] Compared with the 2010 population census, the Han population increased by 60,378,693 persons, or 4.93%, while the population of the 55 national minorities combined increased by 11,675,179 persons, or 10.26%.[429] The 2020 census recorded a total of 845,697 foreign nationals living in mainland China.[462]

Languages

[edit]
A sign at a high school in Jianshui, Yunnan, written in Hani using the Latin alphabet, Nisu using the Yi script, and Chinese

There are as many as 292 living languages in China.[463] The languages most commonly spoken belong to the Sinitic branch of the Sino-Tibetan language family, which contains Mandarin (spoken by 80% of the population),[464][465] and other varieties of Chinese language: Jin, Wu, Min, Hakka, Yue, Xiang, Gan, Hui, Ping and unclassified Tuhua (Shaozhou Tuhua and Xiangnan Tuhua).[466] 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 southwestern 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.[467] Korean is spoken natively along the border with North Korea. Sarikoli, the language of Tajiks in western Xinjiang, is an Indo-European language.[468] Taiwanese indigenous peoples, including a small population on the mainland, speak Austronesian languages.[469]

Standard Chinese, a variety based on the Beijing dialect of Mandarin, is the national language of China, having de facto official status.[2] It is used as a lingua franca between people of different linguistic backgrounds.[470] In the autonomous regions of China, other languages may also serve as a lingua franca, such as Uyghur in Xinjiang, where governmental services in Uyghur are constitutionally guaranteed.[471]

Religion

[edit]
Geographic distribution of religions in China:
[472][473][474][475]
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

Freedom of religion is guaranteed by China's constitution, although religious organizations that lack official approval can be subject to state persecution.[193] The government of the country is officially atheist, and the Chinese Communist Party requires its members to be atheist.[476] Religious affairs and issues in the country are overseen by the National Religious Affairs Administration, under the CCP's United Front Work Department.[477]

Taoist temple on top of Wudang Mountains in Hubei, China

Over the millennia, the Chinese civilization has been influenced by various religious movements. The "three doctrines" of Confucianism, Taoism, and Buddhism have historically shaped Chinese culture,[478][479] enriching a theological and spiritual framework of traditional religion which harks back to the early Shang and Zhou dynasty. Chinese folk religion, which is framed by the three doctrines and by other traditions,[480] consists in allegiance to the shen, who can be deities of the surrounding nature or ancestral principles of human groups, concepts of civility, culture heroes, many of whom feature in Chinese mythology and history.[481] Amongst the most popular cults of folk religion are those of the Yellow Emperor, embodiment of the God of Heaven and one of the two divine patriarchs of the Chinese people,[482][483] of Mazu (goddess of the seas),[482] Guandi (god of war and business), Caishen (god of prosperity and richness), Pangu and many others. In the early decades of the 21st century, the Chinese government has been engaged in a rehabilitation of folk cults—formally recognizing them as "folk beliefs" as distinguished from doctrinal religions,[484] and often reconstructing them into forms of "highly curated" civil religion[485]—as well as in a national and international promotion of Buddhism.[486] China is home to many of the world's tallest religious statues, representing either deities of Chinese folk religion or enlightened beings of Buddhism; the tallest of all is the Spring Temple Buddha in Henan.

Taoism has served as a state religion several times throughout Chinese history.

Statistics on religious affiliation in China are difficult to gather due to complex and varying definitions of religion and the diffusive nature of Chinese religious traditions. Scholars note that in China there is no clear boundary between the three doctrines and local folk religious practices.[478] Chinese religions or some of their currents are also definable as non-theistic and humanistic, since they do not hold that divine creativity is completely transcendent, but that it is inherent in the world and in particular in the human being.[487] In 2023, according to surveys done by Pew Research, 93% of respondents were formally unaffiliated with any religion. However, in terms of practices, 75% visit family graveyards each year, 47% believe in feng shui, 33% believe in buddha, 26% burn incense to deities each year and 18% believe in taoist deities. These are not exclusive beliefs and often these will overlap as the respondents will have multiple beliefs at the same time. For example, of those 33% who believe in buddha, a significant portion also believe in figures such as Taoist immortals, Jesus Christ, Catholic God and Allah.[488] Chinese folk religion also comprises a variety of salvationist doctrinal organized movements which emerged since the Song dynasty.[489] There are also ethnic minorities in China who maintain their own indigenous religions, while major religions characteristic of specific ethnic groups include Tibetan Buddhism among Tibetans, Mongols and Yugurs,[490] and Islam among the Hui, Uyghur, Kazakh,[491] and Kyrgyz peoples, and other ethnicities in the northern and northwestern regions of the country.

Education

[edit]
Beijing's Peking University, one of the top-ranked universities in China[492][493]

Compulsory education in China comprises primary and junior secondary school, which together last for nine years from the age of 6 and 15.[494] The Gaokao, China's national university entrance exam, is a prerequisite for entrance into most higher education institutions. Vocational education is available to students at the secondary and tertiary level.[495] More than 10 million Chinese students graduated from vocational colleges every year.[496] In 2023, about 92.0 percent of students continued their education at a three-year senior secondary school, while 60.8 percent of secondary school graduates were enrolled in higher education.[497]

China has the largest education system in the world,[498] with about 287 million students and 18.85 million full-time teachers in over 470,300 schools in 2023.[497] Annual education investment went from less than US$50 billion in 2003 to more than US$817 billion in 2020.[499][500] 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, it only totalled ¥3,204.[501] China's literacy rate has grown dramatically, from only 20% in 1949 and 65.5% in 1979,[502] to 97% of the population over age 15 in 2020.[503]

As of 2024, China has over 3,167 universities, with over 47.6 million students enrolled in mainland China, giving China the largest higher education system in the world.[504][505] As of 2025, China had the world's highest number of top universities.[506][507][508] Currently, China trails only the United States and the United Kingdom in terms of representation on lists of the top 200 universities according to the 2024 Aggregate Ranking of Top Universities, a composite ranking system of three world-most followed university rankings (ARWU+QS+THE).[509] China had five universities listed among the world's top 50, placing it third after the United States and the United Kingdom based on aggregate performance from four widely observed university rankings (THE+ARWU+QS+US News).[510] China is home to 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[511] and the Academic Ranking of World Universities.[512] These universities are members of the C9 League, an alliance of elite Chinese universities offering comprehensive and leading education.[513]

Health

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

The National Health Commission, together with its counterparts in the local commissions, oversees the health needs of the population.[514] An emphasis on public health and preventive medicine has characterized Chinese health policy since the early 1950s. 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.[515]

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. Healthcare in China became mostly privatized, and experienced a significant rise in quality. In 2009, the government began a three-year large-scale healthcare provision initiative worth US$124 billion.[516] By 2011, the campaign resulted in 95% of China's population having basic health insurance coverage.[517] By 2022, China had established itself as a key producer and exporter of pharmaceuticals, producing around 40 percent of active pharmaceutical ingredients in 2017.[518]

As of 2024, the life expectancy at birth exceeds 79 years.[519] As of 2023, the infant mortality rate is 5 per thousand.[520] Both have improved significantly since the 1950s.[v] Rates of stunting, a condition caused by malnutrition, have declined from 33.1% in 1990 to 4.5% in 2024.[523][524] 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,[525] hundreds of millions of cigarette smokers,[526] and an increase in obesity among urban youths.[527][528] In 2010, air pollution caused 1.2 million premature deaths in China.[529] Chinese mental health services are inadequate.[530] China's large population and densely populated cities have led to serious disease outbreaks, such as SARS in 2003, although this has since been largely contained.[531] The COVID-19 pandemic was first identified in Wuhan in December 2019;[532][533] pandemic led the government to enforce strict public health measures intended to completely eradicate the virus, a goal that was eventually abandoned in December 2022 after protests against the policy.[534][535]

Culture and society

[edit]
A moon gate in a Chinese garden

Since ancient times, Chinese culture has been heavily influenced by Confucianism. Chinese culture, in turn, has heavily influenced East Asia and Southeast Asia.[536] 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.[537] 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.[538] Examinations and a culture of merit remain greatly valued in China today.[539]

Fenghuang County, an ancient town that harbors many architectural remains of Ming and Qing styles[540]

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,[541][542] and folk and variety art in particular have sparked interest nationally and even worldwide.[543] Access to foreign media remains heavily restricted.[544]

Architecture

[edit]

Chinese architecture has developed over millennia in China and has remained a vestigial source of perennial influence on the development of East Asian architecture,[545][546][547] including in Japan, Korea, and Mongolia.[548] and minor influences on the architecture of Southeast and South Asia including the countries of Malaysia, Singapore, Indonesia, Sri Lanka, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia, Vietnam and the Philippines.[549][550]

Chinese architecture is characterized by bilateral symmetry, use of enclosed open spaces, feng shui (e.g. directional hierarchies),[551] a horizontal emphasis, and an allusion to various cosmological, mythological or in general symbolic elements. Chinese architecture traditionally classifies structures according to type, ranging from pagodas to palaces.[552][548]

Tiananmen Square, a city square in the city center of Beijing. Tiananmen is the entrance gate of the Forbidden City.

Chinese architecture varies widely based on status or affiliation, such as whether the structures were constructed for emperors, commoners, or for religious purposes. Other variations in Chinese architecture are shown in vernacular styles associated with different geographic regions and different ethnic heritages, such as the stilt houses in the south, the Yaodong buildings in the northwest, the yurt buildings of nomadic people, and the Siheyuan buildings in the north.[553]

Literature

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

Chinese literature has its roots in the Zhou dynasty's literary tradition.[554] The classical texts of China encompass a wide range of thoughts and subjects, such as the calendar, military, astrology, herbology, and geography, as well as many others.[555] Among the most significant early works are the I Ching and the Shujing, which are part of the Four Books and Five Classics. These texts were the cornerstone of the Confucian curriculum sponsored by the state throughout the dynastic periods. 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. 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.[556] 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.[557] Along with the wuxia fictions of Jin Yong and Liang Yusheng,[558] it remains an enduring source of popular culture in the Chinese sphere of influence.[559]

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.[560] Various literary genres, such as misty poetry, scar literature, young adult fiction and the xungen literature, which is influenced by magic realism,[561] emerged following the Cultural Revolution. Mo Yan, a xungen literature author, was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2012.[562]

Music

[edit]

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 and Cantonese opera.[563] Chinese pop (C-Pop) includes mandopop and cantopop. Chinese hip hop and Hong Kong hip hop have become popular.[564]

Fashion

[edit]
Young women wearing Hanfu at the Qufu Normal University, Shandong

Hanfu is the historical clothing of the Han people in China. The qipao or cheongsam is a popular Chinese female dress.[565] The hanfu movement has been popular in contemporary times and seeks to revitalize Hanfu clothing.[566] China Fashion Week is the country's only national-level fashion festival.[567]

Media

[edit]

The mass media of China primarily consists of television, newspapers, radio, and magazines. State media outlets operate under the control of the CCP. The largest media organizations are the People's Daily, Xinhua News Agency, and the China Media Group consisting of China Central Television, China Global Television Network, China National Radio and China Radio International.[568]

Cinema was first introduced to China in 1896 and the first Chinese film, Dingjun Mountain, was released in 1905.[569] China has had the largest number of movie screens in the world since 2016;[570] China became the largest cinema market in 2020,[571][572] and domestic movies dominate the market.[573] The top three highest-grossing films in China as of 2025 were Ne Zha 2 (2025), The Battle at Lake Changjin (2021), and Wolf Warrior 2 (2017).[574] In 2025, the video game market of China was the world's largest by revenue.[575] China has the most comprehensive and sophisticated Internet censorship regime in the world called the Great Firewall, with numerous websites being blocked.[576] China requires a real-name system for Internet services and online platforms.[577]

Cuisine

[edit]
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.[578] Chinese cuisine is known for its breadth of cooking methods and ingredients.[579] China's staple food is rice in the northeast and south, and wheat-based breads and noodles in the north. Bean products such as tofu and soy milk remain a popular source of protein. Pork is now the most popular meat in China, accounting for about three-fourths of the country's total meat consumption.[580] There is also the vegetarian Buddhist cuisine and the pork-free Chinese Islamic cuisine. Chinese cuisine, due to the area's proximity to the ocean and milder climate, has a wide variety of seafood and vegetables. Offshoots of Chinese food, such as Hong Kong cuisine and American Chinese cuisine, have emerged in the Chinese diaspora.

Sports

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

China has one of the oldest sporting cultures. There is evidence that archery (shèjiàn) was practiced during the Western Zhou dynasty. Swordplay (jiànshù) and cuju, a sport loosely related to association football[581] date back to China's early dynasties as well.[582]

Physical fitness is widely emphasized in Chinese culture, with morning exercises such as qigong and tai chi widely practiced,[583] and commercial gyms and private fitness clubs are gaining popularity.[584] Basketball is the most popular spectator sport in China.[585] The Chinese Basketball Association and the American National Basketball Association also have a huge national following amongst the Chinese populace, with native-born and NBA-bound Chinese players and well-known national household names such as Yao Ming and Yi Jianlian being held in high esteem.[586] China's professional football league, known as Chinese Super League, is the largest football market in East Asia.[587] Other popular sports include martial arts, table tennis, badminton, swimming and snooker. China is home to a huge number of cyclists, with an estimated 470 million bicycles as of 2012.[588] China has the world's largest esports market.[589] Many more traditional sports, such as dragon boat racing, Mongolian-style wrestling[590][591] and horse racing are also popular.

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 any participating nation that year.[592] China also won the most medals at the 2012 Summer Paralympics, with 231 overall, including 95 gold.[593][594] In 2011, Shenzhen 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 collaboratively hosted the 2022 Winter Olympics, making Beijing the first dual Olympic city by holding both the Summer Olympics and the Winter Olympics.[595][596] China hosted the Asian Games in 1990 (Beijing), 2010 (Guangzhou), and 2023 (Hangzhou).[597]

See also

[edit]

Notes

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References

[edit]

Further reading

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
China (中國), officially the People's Republic of China (PRC) (中华人民共和国; Zhōnghuá Rénmín Gònghéguó), is a sovereign state in East Asia comprising vast continental territory including the special administrative regions of Hong Kong and Macau. Beijing is its capital and Shanghai its largest city. As of the end of 2025, it has a population of approximately 1.405 billion, making it the world's second-most populous nation. It is one of the world's two largest economies by nominal GDP, the largest by purchasing power parity, and the top merchandise exporter. Governed since 1949 as a unitary Marxist-Leninist one-party socialist republic under the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), which exercises absolute control over the state, military, judiciary, and economy without multiparty elections. Since 1978 market-oriented reforms, China has achieved average annual GDP growth of nearly 10 percent, lifting over 800 million people out of extreme poverty via industrialization, urbanization, and exports, enabling infrastructure and technological advances in high-speed rail and renewable energy—though growth has slowed to 4-5 percent amid debt, demographic decline from past family-size restrictions, and other challenges. Home to one of the world's oldest continuous civilizations, China features extensive cultural and natural heritage, including 60 UNESCO World Heritage Sites such as the Great Wall, Forbidden City, and South China's karst landscapes.

Names and Etymology

Historical Designations

The Chinese polity has historically been called Zhōngguó (中國), meaning "Central States" or "Middle Kingdom," signifying its role as the civilized core amid peripheral territories. This term first appeared in Zhou dynasty texts around the 7th century BCE, such as the Zuozhuan, referring to central domains under Zhou influence during the Spring and Autumn period (771–476 BCE). Over time, Zhōngguó expanded from specific central polities to broader Han territories and dynasties, becoming a standard proper noun in the late imperial era. By the Qing dynasty (1644–1912), Manchu rulers used equivalents like Dulimbai Gurun ("Central Nation") to fit this framework. Earlier indigenous terms included Huáxià (華夏), an ethnonym for Zhou-era tribes stressing cultural refinement, predating Zhōngguó and often interchangeable in texts like the Shijing (詩經) (compiled ca. 11th–7th centuries BCE). During the Warring States period (475–221 BCE), variant centralist terms emerged, but Qin unification (221–206 BCE) standardized imperial nomenclature based on these traditions. Foreign exonyms often derived from specific dynasties or regions. "China" stems from Qín (pronounced "Chin"), transmitted via Sanskrit Cīna (in the Mahabharata, ca. 400 BCE–400 CE) and Old Persian Chīn, denoting the unifying northwestern polity. This term dominated Indic, Persian, and European usage, eclipsing earlier Graeco-Roman names like Sêres for silk producers in Central Asia (1st century BCE, per Strabo). In medieval Central Asia and Europe, northern China was termed Khitay or Cathay after the Khitan (Qidan) Liao dynasty (907–1125), which held Beijing. Marco Polo's Travels (ca. 1298) spread this name, alongside Mangi (from Southern Song Mǎnzī, 1127–1279), amid Yuan-era (1271–1368) divisions. External names typically reflected ruling groups or regions rather than Zhōngguó.

Modern Terminology

The official name of the state founded on October 1, 1949, is the People's Republic of China (Zhōnghuá Rénmín Gònghéguó, 中华人民共和国), denoting a socialist republic led by the Chinese Communist Party. This emphasizes the Chinese (Zhōnghuá) ethnic and cultural foundation, people's (rénmín) governance, and republican (gònghéguó) form, setting it apart from the prior Republic of China (1912–1949). Within China, the country is typically called Zhōngguó (中国), translating to "central states" or "middle kingdom," which arose from ancient views of Han core areas as the political and cultural center amid surrounding territories. By the late 19th century, Zhōngguó had become the standard national self-reference in diplomacy and persists as the everyday and official shorthand. The English term "China," etymologically distinct from Zhōngguó, originates from the Qin dynasty (221–206 BCE) through Persian (Chīn), Sanskrit (Cīna), Latin (Sina), and Silk Road trade routes. To differentiate territory under direct control post-1949, "Mainland China" (Dàlù, 中国大陆) denotes the geographic mainland excluding Taiwan, with Hong Kong and Macau later incorporated as special administrative regions in 1997 and 1999 under "one country, two systems." Globally, "China" refers to the People's Republic, which assumed the United Nations seat from the Republic of China in 1971, aligning with widespread recognition of its control over most claimed areas despite ongoing disputes.

History

Prehistory and Ancient Civilizations

Evidence of early humans in China dates to the Paleolithic period, with fossils known as from near Beijing, spanning 770,000 to 230,000 years ago. These remains include skullcaps, teeth, and stone tools, showing fire use and hunting among archaic hominins. Homo sapiens arrived around 45,000 years ago, as indicated by blade tools and animal bones at Shiyu in Shanxi, suggesting advanced hunting. Neolithic cultures emerged around 7000 BCE in the Yellow River valley, with sites like Peiligang featuring millet cultivation and pottery. The (5000–3000 BCE) along the middle Yellow River produced painted pottery, pit-house villages, and domesticated pigs and dogs, alongside rice and millet farming that drove population growth. The succeeding (3000–2000 BCE) featured fortified settlements with rammed-earth walls up to 10 meters high, black-burnished pottery on slow wheels, proto-urban centers, social stratification, evidence of conflict from mass graves, and early metallurgy. The Bronze Age marked the rise of ancient civilizations, starting with the (c. 2070–1600 BCE), whose archaeological confirmation remains limited and relies primarily on later textual records without inscriptional proof. Erlitou in Henan yields palatial structures and bronze casting from around 1900 BCE, possibly linking to late Xia or early Shang; 2024 excavations revealed rammed-earth walls and an expanded site layout, further supporting Xia capital associations. The (c. 1600–1046 BCE), attested at Anyang (Yinxu), employed oracle bone inscriptions—over 100,000 incised fragments of ox scapulae and turtle plastrons with the earliest mature Chinese script—for divinations, royal genealogies, and calendars under kings like Wu Ding (c. 1250–1192 BCE). Shang society focused on ancestor worship, piece-mold cast bronze ritual vessels, stratified burials with human sacrifice, and chariots influenced by western steppes. The (1046–256 BCE) from the Wei River valley overthrew the Shang at Muye, justifying rule through the —divine sanction revocable for moral lapses, as noted on bronzes. Western Zhou (1046–771 BCE) bronzes detail feudal enfeoffments and land grants, with iron tools post-1000 BCE boosting agriculture. Eastern Zhou (770–256 BCE), after nomadic invasions prompted a capital shift to Luoyang, witnessed philosophical advances, crossbow warfare innovations, tomb complexes, and city walls amid decentralized vassal states that weakened central authority into the Warring States era.

Imperial Dynasties

The imperial period of China commenced with the Qin dynasty's conquest and unification of the warring states in 221 BC under Ying Zheng, who proclaimed himself Qin Shi Huang, the First Emperor. This marked the end of the Zhou dynasty's fragmented feudal system and the imposition of a centralized bureaucratic state with standardized weights, measures, currency, and script across the realm. Qin's Legalist policies emphasized strict laws, forced labor for massive infrastructure projects like early Great Wall segments and the Terracotta Army mausoleum, and suppression of dissent through book burnings and executions of scholars, fostering short-term stability but provoking widespread rebellion due to heavy taxation and corvée labor. The dynasty collapsed in 206 BC following the emperor's death and uprisings led by figures like Liu Bang, who founded the subsequent Han dynasty. The Han dynasty (206 BC–220 AD), divided into Western (206 BC–9 AD) and Eastern (25–220 AD) phases, represented a golden era of cultural and economic consolidation, with a population peaking at around 60 million by 2 AD. It adopted Confucianism as state orthodoxy under Emperor Wu (r. 141–87 BC), establishing the imperial examination system for civil service recruitment based on classical texts, which endured for centuries. Economically, iron plows and crop rotation boosted agriculture, while the Silk Road facilitated trade in silk, spices, and horses, extending Han influence westward to Central Asia and yielding innovations like paper (invented ca. 105 AD by Cai Lun) and seismographs. Militarily, campaigns against the Xiongnu nomads under Wu expanded territory to include modern Vietnam and Korea, though overextension and eunuch corruption contributed to the dynasty's fragmentation into the Three Kingdoms period after the Yellow Turban Rebellion in 184 AD. After centuries of division, the Sui (581–618) and Tang (618–907) dynasties reunified China, with Tang often regarded as a cosmopolitan peak due to territorial expansion to 12 million square kilometers under Emperor Taizong (r. 626–649) and the capture of the Tang capital by An Lushan in 755 marking its decline. Tang advancements included woodblock printing, advancements in porcelain and poetry—epitomized by Li Bai and Du Fu—and thriving international trade via the Silk Road, attracting merchants from Persia to Japan, though eunuch interference and fiscal strain from wars eroded central authority, leading to warlord fragmentation by 907. The Song dynasty (960–1279), despite military vulnerabilities to northern nomads, achieved unprecedented economic vitality with a population of 100 million and GDP per capita rivaling medieval Europe, driven by rice strains enabling double cropping and iron production reaching 125,000 tons annually by the 11th century. Innovations such as movable-type printing (Bi Sheng, ca. 1040), gunpowder weapons, the magnetic compass for navigation, and the world's first paper currency sustained commerce and urbanization, with Kaifeng boasting over 1 million residents. Internal divisions between civil bureaucrats and military, coupled with Jurchen and Mongol invasions, confined Song rule to southern territories after 1127, culminating in Kublai Khan's conquest in 1279. The Mongol-led Yuan dynasty (1271–1368), proclaimed by Kublai Khan after subjugating the Song, imposed a four-tier ethnic hierarchy privileging Mongols over Han Chinese, yet facilitated Eurasian trade via the Pax Mongolica and canal expansions linking the Yellow and Yangtze rivers. Kublai's failed invasions of Japan (1274, 1281) and Vietnam highlighted logistical limits, while heavy taxation, plagues, and Han resentment fueled the Red Turban Rebellion, enabling Zhu Yuanzhang to overthrow Yuan rule and establish the Ming. The Ming dynasty (1368–1644) restored Han Chinese sovereignty, completing the Great Wall's modern form with 8,850 km of fortifications against Mongol threats and dispatching Zheng He's treasure fleets on seven voyages (1405–1433) that reached East Africa with fleets of up to 317 ships and 27,000 men, projecting naval power before abrupt cessation due to fiscal conservatism. Agricultural output surged via New World crop introductions like maize and sweet potatoes, supporting 150–200 million people, but eunuch dominance, peasant revolts like Li Zicheng's in 1644, and Manchu incursions from the north precipitated the dynasty's fall. The Manchu Qing dynasty (1644–1912) expanded China's territory to 13 million square kilometers, incorporating Tibet, Xinjiang, and Taiwan through campaigns like the Dzungar genocide (1755–1758) under Qianlong (r. 1735–1796), achieving peak population of 400 million by 1850 via stable agriculture. However, corruption, technological stagnation, and defeats in the Opium Wars—First (1839–1842) ceding Hong Kong to Britain after British naval superiority at the Battle of the Bogue, and Second (1856–1860) opening treaty ports—exposed military obsolescence, sparking the Taiping Rebellion (1850–1864) that killed 20–30 million and accelerated dynastic decay. The 1911 Xinhai Revolution, amid fiscal bankruptcy and foreign encroachments, forced the abdication of Puyi, ending imperial rule.

Fall of the Qing and Republican Era (1912–1949)

The Xinhai Revolution erupted on October 10, 1911, with the Wuchang Uprising, where elements of the Qing New Army mutinied against imperial rule, sparking widespread revolts across provinces. This nationalist uprising, driven by resentment over foreign encroachments like the Opium Wars and unequal treaties, as well as internal failures such as corruption, population pressures, and ineffective reforms, culminated in the abdication of the last emperor, Puyi, on February 12, 1912. The revolution ended over two millennia of imperial dynasties but failed to establish stable republican governance, as power struggles immediately undermined unity. Sun Yat-sen, leader of the revolutionary Tongmenghui alliance, briefly served as provisional president of the Republic of China proclaimed on January 1, 1912, but yielded to Yuan Shikai, a Qing general, to avoid further civil war; Yuan assumed the presidency on March 10, 1912. Yuan's authoritarian rule dissolved parliament in 1914, suppressed the Kuomintang (KMT, or Nationalists) after Sun's party won elections, and culminated in his failed attempt to restore monarchy as Hongxian Emperor in December 1915, leading to his death in June 1916 amid provincial rebellions. The ensuing Warlord Era (1916–1928) fragmented China into regions controlled by rival military cliques, such as the Zhili, Anhui, and Fengtian, fostering banditry, opium trade resurgence, and economic stagnation while foreign powers exploited the chaos through loans and concessions. Intellectual ferment peaked with the May Fourth Movement on May 4, 1919, when over 3,000 students in Beijing protested the Treaty of Versailles awarding Germany's Shandong concessions to Japan, expanding into nationwide strikes and boycotts that criticized warlord corruption and demanded science, democracy, and vernacular language reform (baihua). This anti-imperialist surge bolstered the fledgling Chinese Communist Party (CCP), founded in 1921 with Soviet aid, and prompted the KMT's reorganization under Sun Yat-sen in Guangzhou, where he allied with the CCP in the First United Front (1924) to counter warlords. Sun's death in March 1925 elevated Chiang Kai-shek, who launched the Northern Expedition in July 1926; the National Revolutionary Army advanced northward, capturing key cities like Wuhan and Nanjing by 1927, nominally unifying China under KMT control by June 1928 after defeating major warlord alliances. The Nanjing Decade (1928–1937) saw the KMT government under Chiang prioritize centralization, abolishing unequal treaties with some powers, stabilizing currency via the fabi in 1935, and achieving modest industrialization—railways expanded from 8,000 to 20,000 kilometers, and GDP grew at 3.5% annually amid global depression—though rural poverty, corruption, and unequal land distribution persisted. Politically, Chiang suppressed CCP forces in five encirclement campaigns, forcing Mao Zedong's Long March (1934–1935) that reduced communist numbers from 300,000 to under 10,000, while Japanese aggression escalated with the Manchurian invasion (1931) and full-scale war after the Marco Polo Bridge Incident on July 7, 1937. The Second Sino-Japanese War (1937–1945) devastated China, with Japanese forces capturing Nanjing in December 1937 and perpetrating mass killings estimated at 200,000–300,000 civilians; overall Chinese casualties exceeded 15 million military and civilian deaths, including major battles like Shanghai (1937, 200,000+ dead) and Wuhan (1938). A Second United Front briefly halted KMT-CCP infighting, but mutual distrust prevailed as both sides conserved strength. Post-1945, renewed civil war erupted after Japan's surrender, with CCP forces leveraging rural guerrilla tactics and land reforms to expand from 1.2 million troops in 1945 to 4 million by 1949, capturing key cities like Mukden (October 1948) and Beijing (January 1949) in decisive campaigns that inflicted 1.5 million KMT casualties. KMT corruption, hyperinflation (prices rising 2,000% in 1948), and strategic blunders eroded support, culminating in Chiang's retreat to Taiwan; on October 1, 1949, Mao declared the People's Republic of China in Beijing, ending the Republican era on the mainland. This outcome reflected the CCP's effective mobilization against warlord legacies and Japanese devastation, though KMT narratives emphasize Soviet aid to communists (over $300 million in weapons) as pivotal, contrasting CCP claims of popular mandate.

Establishment of the People's Republic (1949–1976)

On October 1, 1949, Mao Zedong proclaimed the establishment of the People's Republic of China (PRC) from the rostrum of Tiananmen Gate in Beijing, declaring the end of the Chinese Civil War and designating Beijing as the national capital. This followed the Chinese Communist Party's (CCP) decisive military victories over the Nationalist forces led by Chiang Kai-shek, who relocated the Republic of China government to Taiwan by December 1949, retaining control over the island with approximately 2 million troops and civilians. The PRC's formation marked the CCP's consolidation of power over mainland China, with Mao as chairman of both the party and the new Central People's Government, emphasizing a transition to socialist reconstruction amid ongoing civil strife that had claimed millions of lives since the 1920s. Early governance focused on consolidating control through campaigns like the suppression of counter-revolutionaries in 1950–1951, which executed or imprisoned hundreds of thousands of former Nationalist officials and perceived threats, and land reform from 1949 to 1953 that redistributed over 40 million hectares from landlords to peasants but involved mass trials, public struggles, and executions estimated at 1 to 2 million landlords and their families. These measures aimed to eliminate feudal structures and class enemies, but resulted in widespread violence and social upheaval, with rural production disrupted by the destruction of land deeds and forced collectivization. By 1953, the First Five-Year Plan emphasized heavy industry with Soviet assistance, achieving modest growth in steel output to 1.8 million tons annually, though agricultural stagnation persisted due to coerced labor and ideological priorities over practical farming. The PRC's intervention in the Korean War (1950–1953) diverted resources, costing over 400,000 Chinese lives and straining the economy, while solidifying alliances with the Soviet Union until relations soured by the late 1950s. The Great Leap Forward, launched in 1958, sought rapid industrialization and agricultural collectivization via people's communes that merged 99% of rural households into vast units, promoting backyard furnaces and exaggerated grain reports to meet utopian production targets. Policy-induced disruptions, including the diversion of labor from farming to steel-making, falsified statistics, and export of grain amid shortages, triggered the Great Chinese Famine from 1959 to 1961, with death toll estimates ranging from 23 million to 55 million primarily from starvation and related diseases. Independent analyses attribute the catastrophe to central planning failures, resistance to local famine reports, and Mao's insistence on class struggle over evidence-based adjustments, leading to industrial output collapse and rural depopulation. Recovery began only after 1962, following policy retreats like commune disbandments, but the episode eroded faith in CCP competence and prompted internal critiques suppressed via the Anti-Rightist Campaign, which persecuted over 500,000 intellectuals from 1957 onward. From 1966 to 1976, the Cultural Revolution unfolded as Mao's bid to purge bureaucratic rivals and revive revolutionary zeal, mobilizing millions of youth as Red Guards to attack "capitalist roaders" through struggle sessions, property seizures, and violence targeting party officials, educators, and cultural figures. The campaign dismantled institutions, closing schools and universities for years, destroying historical artifacts, and causing societal breakdown, with death tolls estimated at 500,000 to 2 million from beatings, suicides, and massacres, including documented cannibalism in Guangxi province. Economic stagnation ensued, with GDP growth averaging under 3% annually, as factional fighting paralyzed administration until Mao's intervention via the People's Liberation Army in 1968. The era ended with Mao's death on September 9, 1976, from complications of Parkinson's disease and heart failure at age 82, leaving a legacy of ideological fervor that prioritized political purity over material welfare, resulting in tens of millions of excess deaths across the period.

Reform Era and Economic Transformation (1978–2012)

After Mao Zedong's death in 1976 and the arrest of the Gang of Four, Deng Xiaoping consolidated power. At the Third Plenum of the 11th Central Committee in December 1978, he launched "Reform and Opening Up," shifting from ideological campaigns to pragmatic modernization focused on four areas: agriculture, industry, national defense, and science and technology. Reforms blended market mechanisms with state planning, including decollectivization through the household responsibility system. This allowed farmers to sell surplus production after meeting quotas, increasing agricultural output by over 50% in the early 1980s. Industrial reforms and foreign engagement followed, with Special Economic Zones (SEZs) established in 1980 in Shenzhen, Zhuhai, Shantou, and Xiamen. These offered tax incentives, relaxed regulations, and infrastructure to draw foreign direct investment (FDI) and technology. SEZs captured 59.8% of China's FDI in 1981 and, by 2007, contributed about 22% of GDP and 46% of FDI inflows, spurring export manufacturing and over 30 million jobs. State-owned enterprises (SOEs), which had dominated over 70% of pre-reform output, saw restructuring from the late 1970s: greater managerial autonomy, a dual-track pricing system from 1979, and the 1990s "grasping the large and releasing the small" approach. This corporatized large SOEs and privatized or closed smaller inefficient ones, reducing SOE share to under 30% of industrial output by 2012. China joined the World Trade Organization on December 11, 2001, committing to tariff cuts and intellectual property protections. This spurred global integration, with exports rising from $266 billion in 2001 to $2.05 trillion by 2012 and average annual GDP growth over 9% from 1978 to 2012. Per capita GDP increased from $156 in 1978 to over $6,000 in constant terms. Reforms lifted over 800 million from extreme poverty, dropping the rural poverty rate from 30.7% (250 million people) in 1978 to under 10% by 2012, via migration, agricultural gains, and manufacturing jobs. Urbanization grew from 18% to 52%, fueled by township and village enterprises that employed over 100 million by the mid-1990s and shifted over 70% of GDP to private and non-state sectors by the early 2000s. Party control persisted in key areas, with non-state growth driven by competition and improved property rights; total factor productivity explained about 40% of post-1978 output growth. Inequality increased, with the Gini coefficient from 0.3 in 1978 to 0.49 by 2012, due to coastal advantages, though market incentives reversed prior stagnation.

Xi Jinping Leadership (2012–Present)

Xi Jinping became General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) in November 2012 and President of China in March 2013, consolidating authority by departing from post-Mao collective leadership norms. In 2017, the CCP enshrined "Xi Jinping Thought on Socialism with Chinese Characteristics for a New Era" in its constitution, elevating his ideology to direct policies in governance, economy, and foreign affairs. Xi's anti-corruption campaign, launched in late 2012, targeted officials at all levels, punishing over 1.5 million by 2017—including high-profile figures like Zhou Yongkang—and peaking at 632,000 cases in 2018. Official figures show declines in bribery, but Western analysts contend it primarily purged rivals to centralize Xi's control rather than enact systemic reform. By 2025, purges extended to finance and the People's Liberation Army Rocket Force, underscoring loyalty amid internal threats. In 2018, term limits for the presidency were abolished, and Xi secured a third term as General Secretary in 2022, filling the Politburo Standing Committee with loyalists and prioritizing ideological conformity over institutional checks. Xi shifted economic policy toward "common prosperity" and self-reliance, with "Made in China 2025" subsidizing advances in AI and semiconductors. Nominal GDP grew from $8.5 trillion in 2012 to $17.7 trillion in 2021, with real growth averaging 6-7% in the 2010s, but slowing amid property crises like Evergrande's default and local debts over 100% of GDP; 2024 growth hit 5%, meeting targets again in 2025 to conclude the 14th Five-Year Plan successfully. Crackdowns on tech giants like Alibaba eroded over $1 trillion in market value, exacerbating youth unemployment above 20% in 2023, while debt servicing rose 321% from 2013-2024. The October 2025 Fourth Plenum outlined a 2030 roadmap emphasizing high-quality development, military strengthening, and reforms; Xi pledged proactive fiscal and monetary policies for 2026 to foster innovation-led growth. Xi's "zero-COVID" policy from 2020 featured mass testing and lockdowns that initially curbed outbreaks but incurred high costs, including Shanghai's 2022 halt affecting 25 million; tied to his prestige, it ended abruptly in December 2022 amid protests, yielding unreported excess deaths estimated in millions by external models. Foreign policy asserted influence via the 2013 Belt and Road Initiative, investing over $1 trillion across 150 countries despite debt-trap critiques like Sri Lanka's port concession. In the South China Sea, artificial islands were militarized post-2013, defying 2016 arbitration. Toward Taiwan, military drills intensified—with 1,700 warplane incursions in 2022—and reunification rhetoric escalated, suspending ties after 2016 elections. Ongoing purges and decoupling pressures in 2025 tested Xi's rejuvenation goals amid U.S.-led alliances.

Geography

Territorial Extent and Borders

The People's Republic of China (PRC) covers approximately 9,596,961 square kilometers, making it the world's fourth-largest country by effective control, excluding claims over Taiwan and disputed areas. This territory includes the mainland, the special administrative regions of Hong Kong and Macau, and offshore islands, but excludes Taiwan, which the PRC claims as its 23rd province despite the island's de facto independence under the Republic of China (ROC) since 1949. The PRC's constitution upholds sovereignty over Taiwan based on Qing Dynasty continuity. Most countries recognize the PRC as China's sole legal government under the One China policy, acknowledging Beijing's claim to Taiwan; the U.S. specifically "acknowledges" rather than "accepts" this position. A 2025 International Institute for Strategic Studies survey indicates that nearly all states recognize, acknowledge, or note the PRC's stance, with few maintaining formal ties to Taiwan. China shares 22,147 kilometers of land borders with 14 countries: North Korea (1,416 km), Russia (4,133 km), Mongolia (4,677 km), Kazakhstan (1,765 km), Kyrgyzstan (1,063 km), Tajikistan (477 km), Afghanistan (92 km), Pakistan (438 km), India (2,659 km), Nepal (1,389 km), Bhutan (477 km), Myanmar (2,185 km), Laos (475 km), and Vietnam (1,297 km). Most borders were demarcated via post-1949 agreements, though the 3,488 km Sino-Indian boundary remains disputed due to undefined colonial-era lines. China's 14,500-kilometer coastline borders the Yellow Sea, East China Sea, and South China Sea. It claims a 200-nautical-mile exclusive economic zone (EEZ) per the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, ratified in 1996. The PRC's "nine-dash line" in the South China Sea overlaps EEZs claimed by Vietnam, the Philippines, Malaysia, Brunei, and Taiwan, involving militarized control of features like the Paracel and Spratly Islands since the 1970s. A 2016 Permanent Court of Arbitration ruling rejected the nine-dash line as lacking legal basis under UNCLOS, though the PRC dismissed it as biased. Key disputes include the Sino-Indian border over Aksai Chin (38,000 km², controlled by China post-1962 war but claimed by India) and Arunachal Pradesh (90,000 km², administered by India but called "South Tibet" by China), rooted in ambiguous 1914 McMahon Line and Qing claims, with incidents like the 2020 Galwan Valley clash. In the East China Sea, claims with Japan over the Senkaku/Diaoyu Islands concern EEZ resources, while PRC patrols in the Taiwan Strait enforce its assertions. These conflicts emphasize resources and strategy over concessions, often highlighted by state media.

Physical Features and Climate

China covers approximately 9.6 million square kilometers with diverse topography, including high-elevation plateaus and mountain ranges in the west—such as the Tibetan Plateau averaging over 4,000 meters, and the Kunlun and Tian Shan ranges—transitioning eastward to low-lying plains and basins ideal for agriculture. Northwestern deserts, like the Gobi extending into Mongolia and the Taklamakan in the Tarim Basin, span about 13% of the land and reinforce arid interior conditions. Major rivers sustain landscapes and populations: the Yangtze, Asia's longest at 6,300 kilometers, flows from the Tibetan Plateau to the East China Sea; the Yellow River, 5,464 kilometers long, carries silt from the Loess Plateau and has historically flooded. Elevations range from Mount Everest's 8,848 meters on the southern border to the -154-meter Turpan Depression, creating stark contrasts that shape ecosystems and settlements. Western features form natural barriers to east-west travel, while eastern plains enable dense urbanization and farming. China's climate spans humid subtropical in the south, continental temperate in the north and interior, and arid to semi-arid in the west, influenced by latitude, elevation, and monsoons. Eastern and southern regions receive heavy summer rains—over 2,000 millimeters annually along the southeastern coast—contrasting with dry, cold Siberian winters. Northern Manchuria sees subarctic winters averaging -20°C in January and humid summers up to 25°C, while southern Guangdong enjoys milder winters above 10°C with persistent humidity. Precipitation drops sharply from over 1,000 millimeters in the Yangtze Basin to under 50 millimeters in northwestern deserts, against a national average of 650 millimeters, fostering eastern floods and western droughts driven by topography and circulation.

Environmental Challenges

China's rapid industrialization, urbanization, and fossil fuel dependence have driven severe environmental degradation, polluting air, water, soil, and land resources. Desertification affects 27.4% of territory, while contamination endangers arable land and water bodies, threatening food security, public health, and economic stability for over 400 million people. Policy measures since the 2010s, including Xi Jinping's "ecological civilization" initiative, confront enforcement shortfalls, industrial shifts, and ongoing extraction, yielding inconsistent advances toward targets such as ending severe air pollution by 2025. Air pollution, chiefly from coal burning and vehicles, continues with urban PM2.5 averages of 29.3 µg/m³ in 2024—more than five times World Health Organization limits—and national levels at 31.0 µg/m³, ranking China 21st globally. Hotspots like Xinjiang's Hotan Prefecture hit 88.9 µg/m³ due to eastward industrial migration outpacing clean energy shifts. Under Xi, coal restrictions and monitoring cut PM2.5 by 41% from 2013 to 2022, yet seasonal smog and health burdens, including reduced life expectancy, highlight lingering issues. Water scarcity and pollution intensify risks, as China commands 7% of global freshwater for 20% of world population, with per capita renewable supplies at 2,018 m³ annually—below scarcity benchmarks. Roughly 70% of rivers and lakes, plus 80-90% of groundwater, suffer contamination from industrial discharges and farm runoff, rendering half of cities' groundwater heavily polluted. Wastewater volumes climbed over 50% from 2000 to 2015 amid surging demand, depleting northern aquifers like those in the North China Plain. Soil pollution taints 10.18% of farmland—impacting 13.86% of grain output—from heavy metals such as cadmium, mercury, nickel, and copper via mining, smelting, and excess fertilizers. In southern rice areas, elevated cadmium raises cancer risks, positioning China among top producers with severe such contamination per 2025 analyses. Remediation trials, including 2025 microbial methods, advance slowly against rising metal buildup exceeding standards. Desertification propels Gobi southward at up to 3,600 km² yearly from overgrazing, deforestation, and climate shifts, barrenizing grasslands and spurring sandstorms that displace communities. The Great Green Wall, planting billions of trees since the 1970s, has slowed expansion but contends with low survival and monoculture flaws. Efforts like 2025 Mongolia partnerships seek broader barriers, though growth lingers in remote zones. As the largest carbon emitter, China relies on coal for 69.5% of CO2 output, though early 2025 emissions declined 1% via solar surges curbing fossils by 2%. Coal-to-chemicals growth may boost emissions 2% by 2029, testing pre-2030 peaking aims, as relocation perpetuates pollution. Centralized Xi policies enhanced air metrics and lifted renewables to 20% of energy by 2025, yet growth focus often displaces rather than eradicates sources like coal expansion. Documented improvements coexist with potential reporting overstatements and threats to biodiversity and resilience.

Government and Politics

Political Structure and Communist Party Dominance

The People's Republic of China operates as a unitary Marxist-Leninist one-party state, with the Communist Party of China (CCP) holding supreme authority over government, military, and society. The 1982 Constitution affirms CCP leadership, subordinating state institutions to party directives and excluding multiparty competition or independent challenges. This system follows Leninist democratic centralism, where lower organs implement higher decisions without dissent to maintain unified control. By late 2024, the CCP had over 100.27 million members—about 7.1% of adults—with cells embedded in enterprises, universities, and communities for oversight. The CCP's hierarchy centers on apex bodies with core decision-making power. The National Congress meets every five years, selecting around 2,300 vetted delegates to elect the Central Committee (about 200 full members and 170 alternates). The committee appoints the Politburo (typically 24 members) and its Standing Committee (usually 7), which deliberate policies in closed sessions. General Secretary Xi Jinping, in office since 2012, leads these bodies and chairs the Central Military Commission, directing the People's Liberation Army (PLA), which swears loyalty to the party over the state. Parallel party committees at all levels—from provinces to villages—mirror and guide state administration to align with CCP goals. Formally, the National People's Congress (NPC) acts as the highest state organ, with nearly 3,000 deputies indirectly elected via local congresses for five-year terms and annual sessions lasting about two weeks. Its Standing Committee (170 members) manages legislation between sessions, including amendments and laws, but primarily ratifies CCP-approved policies; most deputies are party members or loyalists. The State Council, led by Premier Li Qiang since 2023, executes NPC laws under Politburo oversight, with appointments needing party approval. The presidency, held by Xi since 2013, remains ceremonial but symbolizes unified leadership; 2018 reforms removed its term limits. CCP dominance integrates party mechanisms into governance, eliminating separation of powers and embedding ideology throughout. The PLA's 2 million active troops answer to the party's Central Military Commission, bypassing civilian ministries. Xi's anti-corruption campaign since 2012 investigated over 4.7 million officials by 2022, purging rivals and placing loyalists, culminating in his third term as General Secretary in 2022. This centralization extends to state-owned and private firms via party committees, enforcing conformity and surveillance to prioritize regime stability amid economic challenges.

Administrative Divisions and Local Governance

China's administrative divisions follow a five-tier hierarchy: provincial-level, prefecture-level, county-level, township-level, and village-level (or neighborhood committees in urban areas). Established after 1949, this system enables central control through the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) while delegating administrative and economic tasks to lower levels, with ultimate authority held by the CCP everywhere. Provincial divisions manage policy implementation, resources, and appointments; lower tiers handle operations like public services, land use, and taxation. The 34 provincial-level divisions include 23 provinces, 5 autonomous regions for ethnic minorities, 4 centrally administered municipalities (Beijing, Chongqing, Shanghai, Tianjin), and 2 special administrative regions (Hong Kong, Macau). Large provinces like Guangdong and Sichuan oversee extensive areas and populations, while municipalities like Shanghai operate as city-provinces with economic flexibility under party oversight. Autonomous regions—Inner Mongolia, Guangxi, Ningxia, Tibet, Xinjiang—have constitutional self-governing rights, including minority language use and reserved seats, but CCP-appointed Han Chinese leaders prioritize national unity over local autonomy. About 333 prefecture-level units act as intermediaries, including cities, autonomous prefectures, leagues, and prefectures, coordinating provincial plans with county execution, often focusing on industry and infrastructure per central plans. Roughly 2,800 county-level divisions—counties, cities, autonomous counties, districts—focus on grassroots tasks like agriculture, education, and health. Over 40,000 township-level units administer small communities, while around 500,000 villages function as self-governing entities under township oversight, electing committees to enforce party policies on poverty and stability. Local governance merges state and CCP structures in a "party-government unified" model, with party committees paralleling government hierarchies. At each level, the CCP secretary, appointed centrally, directs policy, personnel, and resources, while government heads manage administration under party direction. This Leninist approach ensures conformity and quick mandate execution, as in anti-corruption or COVID-19 efforts, but prioritizes upward accountability to Beijing over local input. Local people's congresses legislate and supervise nominally, but party-vetted delegates limit them to ratification. Under "one country, two systems," special administrative regions retain capitalist systems and separate judiciaries. Hong Kong's Basic Law provides an executive-led government with a chief executive chosen by a Beijing-influenced committee and a legislature; the 2020 National Security Law and 2024 electoral changes have increased candidate vetting and reduced opposition. Macau shows similar autonomy with more self-censorship. Provinces share tax and land sale revenues, promoting growth, but Xi Jinping's recentralization through debt limits and purges has limited local innovation in favor of security. China's legal system follows a socialist framework with civil law influences, prioritizing codified statutes over precedent. The [[Constitution of the People's Republic of China]], enacted in 1982 and amended through 2018, nominally serves as supreme law, outlining state organization, citizens' rights, and [[Chinese Communist Party]] (CCP) leadership. Yet it subordinates legal authority to CCP directives, with Article 1 deeming the socialist system under Party guidance inviolable, and amendments embedding [[Xi Jinping Thought]]. Legislation stems primarily from the [[National People's Congress]] (NPC) and its Standing Committee, which enacted over 300 national laws by 2023; the State Council issues administrative regulations, and local congresses promulgate jurisdictional rules, all requiring alignment with higher CCP policies. The judiciary comprises a hierarchical court system supervised by the [[Supreme People's Court]] (SPC), including about 3,500 basic-level courts, 300 intermediate courts, and 13 higher courts as of 2022, plus specialized tribunals for maritime, intellectual property, and military matters. The procuratorate, headed by the Supreme People's Procuratorate, handles prosecutions, approves most arrests (99% per 2021 data), and oversees judicial compliance, while the Ministry of Public Security conducts investigations. Over 400,000 judges in 2023 face political vetting, with selection emphasizing Party loyalty over expertise per 1987 CCP directives. CCP influence persists through Central Political and Legal Affairs Commissions, which direct outcomes in sensitive cases, such as corruption trials aligned with anti-corruption drives (e.g., Bo Xilai's 2013 case). The 2006 "Three Supremes" doctrine prioritizes the Party's cause, people's interests (as Party-defined), and law, subordinating impartiality to political directives. Trans-regional adjudication reforms since 2015 cut local protectionism in commercial disputes by 20-30% in pilots but have not shielded courts from central Party control in political matters. Without separation of powers, the Party positions itself above the law; the 2018 amendment reinforced leadership without empowering courts to review Party actions. Xi Jinping's 2014-2020 reforms introduced national exams for 95% of new judges by 2019 and centralized funding to limit local interference, but these measures bolstered Party oversight, with SPC leaders holding CCP Central Committee roles. Enforcement remains selective, as administrative litigation reached 318,000 cases in 2022 with plaintiff win rates under 10% against government. Critics, including Chinese scholars, describe this as "rule by law," using legal tools for stability and Party objectives over universal accountability.

Human Rights Record

China's human rights record under the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) features systematic suppression of political dissent, religious freedoms, and minority rights, as documented in multiple international reports. Freedom House rated China 9 out of 100 in its 2024 Freedom in the World report, classifying it as "Not Free" due to the absence of electoral democracy, pervasive surveillance, and restrictions on civil liberties. The United Nations and human rights organizations have highlighted patterns of arbitrary detention, torture, and forced labor, often justified by the CCP as necessary for national security and social stability. These practices stem from the party's monopoly on power, where challenges to its authority are criminalized, leading to widespread self-censorship and fear among citizens. A pivotal event illustrating political repression was the 1989 Tiananmen Square crackdown, where the People's Liberation Army deployed tanks and troops to disperse pro-democracy protesters in Beijing, resulting in hundreds to thousands of deaths according to declassified UK diplomatic cables and eyewitness accounts. Official Chinese figures claimed around 200-300 fatalities, primarily soldiers, but independent estimates, including from Amnesty International, indicate civilian casualties far exceeded this, with ongoing censorship preventing public commemoration or discussion within China. This incident set a precedent for handling dissent, with subsequent purges of activists and intellectuals reinforcing the CCP's intolerance for organized opposition. Treatment of ethnic and religious minorities exemplifies targeted abuses. In Xinjiang, the CCP has detained over one million Uyghurs and other Muslim minorities in internment camps since 2017, involving mass surveillance, forced indoctrination, coerced labor, and allegations of genocide-level policies such as sterilizations to suppress births. A 2022 UN report by the High Commissioner for Human Rights concluded these actions may constitute "serious human rights violations" and potential crimes against humanity, based on credible evidence from detainee testimonies, satellite imagery of facilities, and leaked government documents. Similarly, Falun Gong practitioners have faced persecution since 1999, including torture in custody and forced organ harvesting; UN experts in 2021 expressed alarm over reports of systematic extraction from prisoners of conscience, supported by investigative tribunals citing discrepancies in China's transplant data and witness accounts. The one-child policy, enforced from 1979 to 2015, involved coercive measures like forced abortions and sterilizations, affecting tens of millions and leading to demographic imbalances with an estimated 30-40 million more men than women. Local officials met quotas through invasive monitoring and penalties, including home demolitions and job losses for violators, as corroborated by internal policy documents and survivor testimonies reported in medical journals. Although relaxed to a two-child then three-child policy, the legacy persists in gender-selective abortions and aging population pressures, without accountability for past enforcements. Censorship and surveillance underpin these controls via the Great Firewall, which blocks foreign websites and monitors domestic internet use, earning China the lowest score in Freedom House's 2024 Freedom on the Net report for the tenth consecutive year. Over 10,000 websites are inaccessible, and real-time filtering targets sensitive topics like Tiananmen or Xinjiang, with AI-driven systems and a "social credit" framework penalizing nonconformity through restricted travel or employment. In Hong Kong, the 2020 National Security Law and 2024 Article 23 legislation have curtailed freedoms promised under the 1997 handover, leading to over 10,000 arrests, dissolution of pro-democracy groups, and lengthy sentences for activists, as criticized by the UN for undermining judicial independence. While CCP sources dismiss these as Western fabrications, empirical evidence from leaked directives and victim data indicates a causal link between centralized authority and rights erosion, prioritizing regime stability over individual protections.

Economy

Historical Development and Growth Drivers

Before the 1978 reforms, China's economy followed a centrally planned model established after the 1949 Communist victory. This system emphasized agricultural collectivization and heavy industry, drawing from Soviet practices. The Great Leap Forward (1958–1962) sought rapid industrialization via communal farming and backyard furnaces but caused a severe famine and economic contraction, with grain output dropping up to 30% and 15–55 million excess deaths from starvation and related causes. The Cultural Revolution (1966–1976) further hindered production and human capital, yielding average annual GDP growth below 5% in the 1960s and early 1970s, with per capita income stagnant at about $200. A turning point came at the Third Plenum of the 11th Central Committee in December 1978, under Deng Xiaoping's leadership. It shifted focus to economic modernization over ideology, introducing market-oriented reforms while preserving Communist Party control. Early steps included the household responsibility system, which decollectivized agriculture by granting families land use rights and incentives for surplus output, boosting grain production by 50% from 1978 to 1984. Special economic zones (SEZs), beginning with Shenzhen in 1980, provided tax breaks and regulatory ease to draw foreign direct investment (FDI), which climbed from near zero to $3.5 billion yearly by 1990. Township and village enterprises (TVEs) expanded in the 1980s, hiring over 100 million rural workers by 1996 and accounting for 30% of industrial output via semi-private activities. These changes spurred sustained expansion, with real GDP growing at about 10% annually from 1978 to 2010. China evolved from an agrarian society—where 80% of the population farmed in 1978—into a global manufacturing center by the early 2000s. World Trade Organization entry in 2001 fueled export growth, from $266 billion in 2001 to $2.5 trillion by 2018, supported by rural-to-urban labor migration (over 200 million by 2010) and currency undervaluation for competitiveness. Key drivers encompassed heavy infrastructure investment, backed by household savings rates above 30% of GDP. This financed assets like highways and ports, with investment hitting 40–45% of GDP in peak years, and propelled urbanization from 18% in 1978 to 60% by 2020. Total factor productivity gains from reallocating labor and capital to efficient sectors drove about 40% of growth in the 1980s–1990s, enhanced by technology transfers through joint ventures and state R&D. Yet dependence on state-owned enterprises in vital sectors, plus post-2008 credit surges, fostered inefficiencies. Growth eased to 6–7% yearly after 2010, amid overcapacity and debt surpassing 300% of GDP.

Key Sectors and State Intervention

China's economy features three primary sectors: services, industry (including manufacturing, mining, construction, and utilities), and agriculture. In 2023, services accounted for 54.6% of GDP, industry 38.3%, and agriculture 7.1%. Manufacturing dominates industry, contributing about 26% of GDP in 2024 through export-focused production in electronics, machinery, automobiles, and textiles. High-tech manufacturing grew 9.6% year-on-year in the first three quarters of 2025, boosted by investments in semiconductors, electric vehicles (EVs), and artificial intelligence. Agriculture, while smaller, ensures food security for 1.4 billion people and employs 22% of the workforce, emphasizing rice, wheat, and pork despite limited arable land. State intervention influences these sectors via state-owned enterprises (SOEs), industrial policies, and fiscal tools. SOEs, under central or local government control, produce 30-40% of GDP and lead in energy, telecommunications, finance, transportation, and defense, controlling up to 83% of assets and revenue in key industries as of 2019. They benefit from state bank credit, subsidies, and protections, aiding dominance in areas like shipbuilding, where China secured over 50% of the global market by 2023. The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) directs efforts through five-year plans and "Made in China 2025," which promotes high-tech self-sufficiency via subsidies, R&D, and technology transfers. Subsidies appear in 41% of policies, with tax incentives and procurement favoring sectors like EVs, where China output 9.5 million units in 2023 (over 60% globally), though this has spurred overcapacity in steel and solar. Post-2008 measures include equity in private firms and "common prosperity" since 2021, curbing tech giants like Alibaba to align with state goals, yet raising innovation concerns. SOE capital reached 68% of total firm capital by 2017, prioritizing state direction over markets.

Global Trade and Integration

China's integration into global trade accelerated after 1978 reforms under Deng Xiaoping, transitioning from a closed, planned economy to export-oriented industrialization. Its 2001 World Trade Organization accession demanded tariff cuts, barrier removals, and openings in services and agriculture, spurring foreign direct investment and 30% annual export growth from 2001 to 2006. This fostered structural shifts, elevating manufacturing's GDP share and reducing trade uncertainty, positioning China as the world's top goods exporter. In 2025, merchandise exports hit US$3.8 trillion and imports US$2.6 trillion, yielding a US$1.2 trillion surplus—a 20% rise from 2024's US$992 billion. U.S. shipments dropped 20%, offset by gains in Southeast Asia, the European Union, Africa, and Latin America. Key exports—electronics, machinery, textiles—target the U.S. (US$688.3 billion bilateral trade), EU (US$785.8 billion), ASEAN, Japan, and South Korea. The U.S. goods deficit with China exceeded US$400 billion recently, fueled by China's low costs, subsidies, and supply chains, though U.S. services exports to China yielded a US$33.2 billion surplus in 2024. The 2013 Belt and Road Initiative embeds China deeper in global networks via infrastructure financing in over 140 countries, reviving Silk Road routes and expanding markets. It has lifted bilateral trade up to 4.1% among participants, exported excess steel and construction capacity, and tied 46.6% of China's 2023 trade to partners. Yet, high recipient debt and opaque lending spark concerns over dependency. The Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership, effective 2022, bolsters Asia-Pacific ties, spanning 30% of global GDP and cutting tariffs on 90% of intra-member goods. Frictions endure: U.S. Section 301 tariffs since 2018 target intellectual property theft and forced transfers, prompting Chinese export diversification and tech self-reliance. EU deficits (US$276 billion in 2022) intensify scrutiny of state-owned enterprises and overcapacity in electric vehicles and solar panels. China's surplus-driven strategy often curtails reciprocal access, straining the multilateral system it once joined.

Recent Challenges and Structural Issues

China's economy slowed, with GDP growth at 4.8% year-on-year in Q3 2025, down from 5.2% in Q2, due to weak domestic demand offset by export reliance. Structural factors—high debt, aging population, and slowing productivity—constrain medium-term potential, according to the World Bank. US trade tensions expose export vulnerabilities, yet China's 2025 global trade surplus approaches $1.2 trillion. The property sector poses a major risk, highlighted by Evergrande Group's collapse with over $300 billion in debt and delisting from the Hong Kong Stock Exchange in August 2025. The crisis, persisting since 2020, drove an estimated 8% drop in new home sales in 2025, undermining consumer confidence and local revenues from land sales. Local government debt has surged to nearly 48 trillion RMB officially by end-2024, with hidden liabilities from financing vehicles exceeding 60 trillion RMB, spurring a 10 trillion RMB refinancing effort in late 2024. Youth unemployment intensified labor strains, hitting 18.9% for ages 16-24 in August 2025 (excluding students), as 12.2 million university graduates faced skill mismatches and subdued demand. Demographically, low fertility and rapid aging shrink the working-age population, doubling the elderly share over three decades while contracting the labor force, raising dependency ratios and pressuring pensions. Manufacturing overcapacity fuels deflationary pressures, while state-owned enterprise inefficiencies curb private sector vitality, despite rebalancing pledges in the 2026-2030 Five-Year Plan. Policy emphasis on investment over consumption, coupled with limited fiscal reforms, has spurred demands for bolder stimulus; however, 2025 measures fall short of restoring 5% growth.

Demographics

As of the end of 2024, China's population stood at approximately 1.408 billion, reflecting a decline of 1.4 million from the previous year, according to data from the National Bureau of Statistics. This marks the third consecutive year of population contraction, following a peak of around 1.412 billion in 2021, driven primarily by deaths outpacing births amid persistently low fertility rates. The 2020 national census reported a total of 1,411.78 million residents, providing the most recent comprehensive baseline before annual declines set in. China's demographic trajectory has been profoundly shaped by the one-child policy, enforced from 1979 to 2015, which drastically curtailed fertility rates from over 2.5 births per woman in 1990 to below replacement levels by the early 2000s. The policy, aimed at curbing rapid growth, resulted in an estimated 400 million fewer births and contributed to a skewed sex ratio at birth, averaging 1.16 boys per girl due to selective abortions favoring males. Subsequent relaxations—allowing two children from 2016 and three from 2021—have failed to reverse the trend, with the total fertility rate dipping to 1.01 in 2024, far below the 2.1 needed for population stability. Births numbered 9.54 million in 2024, a modest increase of 520,000 from 2023 but still insufficient to offset 10.94 million deaths, exacerbated by an aging population where over 20% are now aged 60 or older. Economic pressures, high child-rearing costs, urbanization, and delayed marriages—rather than policy alone—sustain the low birth rates, as evidenced by minimal rebound even after incentives like extended maternity leave and subsidies. Projections indicate a shrinking working-age population (15-64 years), contracting by 28% from its peak by 2050, posing challenges to labor supply and pension systems.
YearPopulation (millions)Births (millions)Fertility Rate
20201,41212.01.3
20231,4109.01.0
20241,4089.51.01
These figures, derived from official releases, highlight a structural shift toward depopulation, with urban-rural disparities amplifying the decline in rural areas.

Ethnic Groups and Minorities

China officially recognizes 56 ethnic groups, with Han Chinese forming the vast majority. The 2020 Seventh National Population Census reported 1,286.31 million Han, or 91.11% of the total 1,411.78 million population; the 55 minorities numbered 125.47 million, or 8.89%. These groups concentrate in border regions and autonomous areas, where they often form local pluralities or majorities, though Han migration has shifted demographics in areas like Xinjiang and Tibet. Major minorities include the Zhuang (about 19.6 million, mainly in Guangxi); Hui (Muslim Chinese, nationwide); Uyghurs (Turkic Muslims in Xinjiang, roughly 11 million); Miao (southern provinces); Manchus (northeast); Yi (southwest); Tujia; Tibetans (6-7 million, primarily in the Tibetan Autonomous Region); Mongols (Inner Mongolia); and others like Buyi, Koreans, and Dong. Smaller groups, in the tens or hundreds of thousands, encompass Tajiks, Russians, and Gaoshan (Taiwan indigenous peoples recognized on the mainland). Identification relies on self-identification, linguistic, and cultural criteria, though some subgroups face pressure to fit recognized categories. Autonomy exists in five regions (Xinjiang Uyghur, Tibetan, Inner Mongolian, Ningxia Hui, Guangxi Zhuang), 30 prefectures, and 120 counties, offering minorities preferential policies such as relaxed family planning, educational and employment affirmative action, and nominal self-governance. In practice, the system emphasizes national unity under Communist Party leadership, with minority officials upholding Han-centric policies, limiting true self-rule. Since the 2010s, Xi Jinping's "Sinicization" has promoted Mandarin education, interethnic integration, and cultural assimilation to combat separatism—framed officially as anti-extremism but critiqued as coercive by independent sources. In Xinjiang, where Uyghurs comprise about 46% amid Han influx, over one million have been detained in "vocational training centers" since 2017 for re-education, forced labor, and sterilization, per UN reports citing witness accounts and leaks; China describes these as voluntary deradicalization. Tibetan policies include boarding schools that separate children from families, curb monastic roles, and drive Han-led development, eroding culture despite autonomy claims. These measures prioritize territorial integrity and stability, with data showing declining traditional practices as Han proportions rise in minority regions.

Urbanization and Internal Migration

China's urbanization has shifted the country from a mostly agrarian society to one where urban areas hold the majority of its population. Economic reforms from 1978 under Deng Xiaoping drove the urbanization rate—the share of permanent urban residents—from 18% in 1978 to 67% by 2024, per National Bureau of Statistics data. This fast change, fueled by industry growth, foreign investment, and state infrastructure, moved economic activity to coastal and inland cities. By 2024, urban residents totaled about 944 million of 1.408 billion people. Internal migration from rural to urban areas drives this urbanization. In 2024, around 300 million rural migrant workers—over one-third of the labor force—moved to cities for manufacturing, construction, and service jobs, boosting GDP while sending remittances home. The "floating population" peaked at 286 million in 2020 and remains high, clustering in megacities like Shanghai, Beijing, and Guangzhou. Urban wages, several times rural levels, motivate this; migrant monthly income averaged 4,961 yuan ($700 USD) in 2023. Post-2020, migration slowed slightly due to COVID-19 and an aging rural workforce, but interprovincial flows persist. The 1958 hukou system shapes migration by classifying citizens as rural or urban, tying social services like education, healthcare, and housing to registration. Rural migrants to cities face barriers to these services, leading to informal jobs and poor conditions in a dual urban economy. This limits full urbanization; official rates undercount the urban presence of 300 million migrants without urban hukou, pushing some estimates over 70%. Hukou reforms since 2014 seek urban status for migrants in smaller cities and welfare integration, targeting 70% urbanization by 2029. These have reduced the urban-rural benefits gap from 17.3 to 15 percentage points between 2013 and 2020, though megacities keep tight controls against strain. Challenges persist: overloaded infrastructure, environmental harm, social tensions, higher poverty, and health gaps for non-hukou dwellers. Migration endures as rural areas lag with inefficient agriculture and demographic shifts.

Society

Education and Technological Advancement

China's education system requires nine years of compulsory education for primary and junior secondary levels, achieving near-universal enrollment (over 99% primary, 95% junior secondary) and 97% adult literacy through state expansion since the 1986 Compulsory Education Law. Rural areas, however, face quality shortfalls from resource disparities. Higher education has grown rapidly, with 60% gross tertiary enrollment in 2023 across over 3,000 universities prioritizing STEM to support economic goals. In 2018 PISA assessments, students from Beijing, Shanghai, Jiangsu, and Zhejiang topped global scores in reading, math, and science, surpassing most OECD nations. These outcomes reflect elite urban provinces, excluding migrants and rural students, and highlight national weaknesses in productivity per learning hour and creative problem-solving. Urban-rural gaps widen inequality, as rural students encounter poor facilities, teacher shortages, and reduced advancement to upper secondary education, despite initiatives like boarding schools. Vocational programs often direct rural youth to lower-wage roles, contrasting with urban academic preferences. These efforts bolster technological advances, producing over 4.7 million annual STEM graduates and driving progress in 5G and AI. R&D spending hit 3.61 trillion yuan (2.55% of GDP) in 2024, ranking second worldwide, with 1.6 million invention patents filed in 2023—though many remain incremental. Programs like "Made in China 2025" target self-sufficiency in semiconductors, AI, and robotics, enabling Huawei's dominance in 5G with over 190,000 patents by 2024. Political controls, however, curb innovation by limiting dissent and risk, while U.S. officials cite IP theft via cyber means, forced transfers, and recruitment in over 1,000 cases, favoring imitation over original invention despite scale benefits.

Healthcare System and Public Welfare

China's healthcare system relies on government-mandated basic medical insurance, covering over 95% of the population (1.334 billion people) by late 2023. This marks a rise from about 10% coverage two decades earlier, driven by 2009 reforms that introduced Urban Employee Basic Medical Insurance (UEBMI) for workers and Urban-Rural Residents Basic Medical Insurance (URRBMI) for others; the 2016 merger of urban and rural schemes reduced fragmentation. Reimbursement rates, however, cover roughly 50% of inpatient costs and less for outpatient care, resulting in high out-of-pocket expenses that hit lower-income groups hardest. Health spending hit 7.2% of GDP in 2023 amid aging demographics, though per capita outlay trailed developed nations at $670 in 2021. Health metrics have advanced, with life expectancy reaching 78.6 years in 2023 via broader access and public initiatives—though state-reported data from bodies like the National Health Commission may reflect upward bias from centralized incentives. Infant mortality dropped to 4.5 per 1,000 live births in 2023, and under-5 mortality to 6.8 per 1,000 by 2022, thanks to improved prenatal care and vaccinations. Urban-rural divides persist, however: rural areas suffer lower utilization, higher chronic burdens, and weaker infrastructure, with income gaps driving access disparities. Urban hospitals offer superior facilities and reimbursements, while rural clinics remain understaffed, widening outcome gaps—exacerbated post-COVID by life expectancy differences. Reforms target primary care amid physician shortages and urban facility overuse, prioritizing volume over quality. Public welfare ties into healthcare through a social security system of five insurances—pension, medical, unemployment, work injury, maternity—plus housing funds, guided centrally but managed locally. Pensions now cover urban and rural residents toward unification, yet urban UEBMI benefits outpace rural ones, with uneven compliance; a 2024 survey showed under 30% of firms fully contributing, especially for migrants. Unemployment insurance reached 196 million in 2019 amid an 800 million workforce, offering low benefits and excluding many rural workers despite subsidies like ¥30 annual urban premiums—limiting impact during slowdowns. Additional supports include dibao allowances for the vulnerable and poverty programs that ended extreme poverty for nearly 100 million by 2020, though aging (296 million elderly by 2023) strains funds, spurring 2025 low-income expansions. Rapid coverage gains via subsidies and mandates come with trade-offs in adequacy, as hukou barriers and decentralized funding perpetuate urban-rural inequities favoring wealthier provinces.

Social Policies and Family Structure

China's social policies have shaped family structures, notably through the one-child policy introduced in 1979 to address population growth and resource limits. It limited most urban couples to one child and allowed rural families two if the first was female, with enforcement via fines, job losses, and coerced abortions or sterilizations. The policy prevented about 400 million births, reducing fertility from 2.81 children per woman in 1979 to roughly 1.7 by the early 2010s. Enforcement intensified son preference from patrilineal traditions, spurring sex-selective abortions and female infanticide, which raised the sex ratio at birth to 121 males per 100 females by the mid-2000s. This imbalance caused a "marriage squeeze," leaving millions of men unable to marry, inflating bride prices, and boosting women's leverage, alongside higher divorce rates. Families shifted to a "4-2-1" model—one child aiding two parents and four grandparents—straining support networks and hastening aging, with the workforce expected to decline 28% by 2050. To ease demographic strains, China adopted a universal two-child policy in 2016, then a three-child policy in 2021 that removed quotas and added incentives like extended maternity leave, housing aid, and tax relief—such as Beijing's up to $1,500 per child annually. These steps sought to reverse fertility's drop to 1.01 births per woman by 2024, far below the 2.1 replacement rate, though birth increases were temporary. Urbanization and the hukou system have favored nuclear over extended families, as over 300 million rural migrants moved to cities since the 1980s, often leaving children with grandparents due to urban access barriers. This "left-behind" issue impacts millions, linking to educational and mental health problems, while hukou changes since 2014 have eased but not erased divides. Low marriage and birth rates persist, driven by high child-rearing costs and career pressures, showing policy incentives alone cannot overcome societal disincentives.

Military and Security

People's Liberation Army Organization

The People's Liberation Army (PLA) is the uniformed military branch of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and the People's Republic of China, under the CCP's absolute leadership. Its highest authority is the Central Military Commission (CMC), which operates as both a CCP organ and state institution under the "one institution, two names" system, chaired by Xi Jinping since 2012. The CMC includes 15 functional departments for joint staff, political work, logistics, and equipment, managing strategy, operations, and administration across PLA components. The PLA emphasizes joint operations via five theater commands—Eastern, Southern, Western, Northern, and Central—replacing seven military regions in 2016 to address threats like Taiwan, the South China Sea, and India's border. Each command unites services under a joint structure led by a commander and political commissar, both typically CCP Central Committee members, ensuring party oversight and coordination. The PLA has about 2 million active personnel as of 2025, with the Ground Force (largest at ~965,000) organized into 13 group armies of 50,000–60,000 troops, divided into brigades of 5,000–6,000. The PLA comprises five main services: Ground Force (PLAGF), Navy (PLAN), Air Force (PLAAF), Rocket Force (PLARF), and the Information Support Force (ISF), formed in April 2024 from the former Strategic Support Force for cyber, electronic warfare, and information operations. Supporting arms include the Aerospace Force (ASF) for space, Cyberspace Force (CSF) for networks, and Joint Logistics Support Force (JLSF) for sustainment, promoting integrated domain warfare. Reforms since 2015 prioritize mechanization, informationization, and jointness, including 300,000 personnel cuts to streamline structures and boost effectiveness. Initiated in 2015–2016, reforms centralized CMC control, eliminated service-led regions, elevated the Rocket Force for missiles, and established the SSF (now ISF) for non-kinetic roles. These changes combat departmentalism and localism, enabling multi-domain joint command, though political commissars constrain decentralization. By 2025, the PLA is more professionalized, yet implementation varies, with ground forces dominant and advanced domains lagging.

Defense Modernization and Capabilities

China's defense modernization, led by the Chinese Communist Party under Xi Jinping, aims to build a "world-class" People's Liberation Army (PLA) by 2049. Interim targets include improved joint operations, informatization, and power projection by 2027 and 2035. Priorities encompass anti-access/area denial (A2/AD) systems for regional deterrence, such as in Taiwan contingencies, and global reach through naval and air expansions. Since 2015, reforms have created five theater commands, cut 300,000 personnel, and strengthened Central Military Commission control, but corruption has prompted purges that impact readiness. The 2025 defense budget is 1.78 trillion yuan ($246 billion), up 7.2% nominally from 2024, making China the second-largest spender after the United States. Independent analyses estimate higher true costs, including off-budget items like paramilitaries and R&D, at $314 billion (SIPRI 2024) or $330–450 billion adjusted for purchasing power and hidden expenses. These resources fuel acquisitions of advanced platforms, yielding gains in quantity and select technologies but revealing shortfalls in combat experience and integration. The PLA Rocket Force operates over 400 ICBMs, all U.S.-reachable, with a nuclear arsenal exceeding 600 warheads in mid-2024, expected to top 1,000 by 2030. Hypersonic assets feature the operational DF-17 (1,800–2,500 km range) for strikes on mobile targets like carriers and the tested DF-27 for intercontinental threats, bolstering A2/AD in the Western Pacific. Naval advances include three carriers: Liaoning (2012), Shandong (2019), and Fujian (launched 2022, in trials with electromagnetic catapults and over 80,000 tons displacement). In June 2025, Liaoning and Shandong performed dual-carrier drills beyond the First Island Chain, signaling blue-water progress. The People's Liberation Army Navy boasts over 370 ships and submarines, featuring Type 055 destroyers with sophisticated missiles. The PLA Air Force fields about 300 J-20 stealth fighters as of September 2025, producing 100–120 yearly and shifting to domestic WS-10C/15 engines. These prioritize air superiority and strikes but trail U.S. peers like the F-22 in stealth and sensors due to design trade-offs. Ground units focus on mechanization and amphibious capabilities for scenarios like cross-strait actions, while cyber and space elements leverage civilian tech through military-civil fusion.
Key PLA CapabilityDescriptionStatus (as of 2025)
Nuclear WarheadsOperational stockpile>600, increasing to >1,000 by 2030
ICBMsRoad-mobile, MIRV-capable>400, all U.S.-reachable
J-20 FightersStealth multirole~300 operational, production 100–120/year
Aircraft CarriersConventional/EMALS3 (Liaoning, Shandong, Fujian in trials)
Hypersonic MissilesGlide vehicle systemsDF-17 operational; DF-27 tested
Quantitative advances continue, yet qualitative hurdles remain, such as untested joint operations in intense combat and reliance on imported or copied tech, including engine problems and scant real-world trials. U.S. evaluations view the PLA as a key challenge, urging allied responses.

Internal Security Apparatus

China's internal security apparatus is centralized under the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) to maintain regime stability. It encompasses civilian police, intelligence agencies, paramilitary forces, and surveillance technologies for monitoring the population and addressing threats to political authority. The system has expanded under Xi Jinping, emphasizing "political security" and predictive policing. The Ministry of Public Security (MPS), established in 1949, handles law enforcement, public order, and criminal investigations via local bureaus. It employs about 2 million officers and auxiliaries, operating under the State Council but following CCP directives. Public security spending, including MPS operations, reached 1.4 trillion yuan ($197 billion USD) in 2023, driven by stability priorities. The MPS uses mass surveillance, including facial recognition in urban areas. The Ministry of State Security (MSS), created in 1983, focuses on counter-espionage, domestic political security, and foreign intelligence. It conducts covert operations against subversion and dissent, with regional bureaus for local efforts. Since the 2010s, the MSS has increased high-profile arrests and extended surveillance to cyberspace and overseas communities, often coordinating with MPS through data from telecoms and informants. The People's Armed Police (PAP), reformed in 2018 to report to the Central Military Commission, provides paramilitary support for internal security, riot control, counter-terrorism, and infrastructure protection. It has around 1 million personnel, including rapid-response units and border specialists. The PAP maintains stability during unrest, as seen in large deployments for events like the 2011 Shanghai Expo. Its 2023 budget was 156 billion yuan amid urban protests and ethnic tensions. Surveillance systems support these agencies. The Skynet project, started in 2005, has installed over 600 million cameras in cities for real-time monitoring and high-accuracy license plate recognition. The Sharp Eyes initiative, launched in 2015, covers rural areas, integrating AI from cameras, social media, and sensors for predictive analytics, though accuracy varies outside cities. The Social Credit System, piloted from 2014 and guided by 2018 rules, promotes compliance via blacklisting, aggregating data to identify risks including protest involvement. By 2020, over 30 million people faced travel restrictions for low scores. While focused on economic trust, it aids security by enforcing state loyalty.

Foreign Relations

Bilateral Relations with Major Powers

China's relations with the United States have deteriorated since the late 2010s, marked by trade disputes, technology restrictions, and tensions over Taiwan and the South China Sea. In 2025, the second Trump administration imposed further tariffs and launched a Section 301 investigation into China's adherence to the 2020 Phase One trade agreement, highlighting annual U.S. trade deficits over $300 billion and issues with intellectual property and market access. Talks in Kuala Lumpur on October 25, 2025, sought to prevent escalation, focusing on rare earth exports and technology transfers ahead of a potential Trump-Xi summit. Despite interdependence—U.S. exports to China neared $150 billion in 2024—the ties remain adversarial, strained by U.S. semiconductor controls and alliances like AUKUS. China's partnership with Russia strengthened after the 2014 Ukraine crisis, formalized as "no-limits" coordination in 2022 amid Western sanctions. Trade reached $245 billion in 2024, fueled by Chinese imports of Russian energy, which exceeded 20% of China's total. Military ties include joint exercises and hypersonic technology sharing, though without a formal alliance to evade NATO concerns. In BRICS and the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, they promote de-dollarization, with over 90% of transactions in local currencies by 2025. This counters U.S. influence pragmatically, prioritizing China's economic benefits over deeper involvement in Russian conflicts. China-India relations stay tense due to border disputes along the 3,488 km Line of Actual Control, including the 2020 Galwan Valley clash that killed 20 Indian troops and an undisclosed number of Chinese. A 2024 patrolling agreement enabled partial disengagement in areas like Depsang and Demchok, resuming direct flights on October 25, 2025, to support tourism and trade. Trade surpassed $130 billion in 2024, but India's bans on over 500 Chinese apps and FDI scrutiny reflect concerns over China's Pakistan ties and disputed-territory projects. Rivalry endures, with India bolstering Quad alliances and border infrastructure despite economic links. Economic ties bind China and Japan, with $292.6 billion in 2024 goods trade making Japan China's fourth-largest partner, yet security frictions persist over the Senkaku/Diaoyu Islands. Chinese coast guard incursions into contested East China Sea waters topped 300 annually since 2020, leading Japan to reinforce U.S. defenses and acquire Tomahawk missiles. World War II grievances, such as the Nanjing Massacre, occasionally disrupt diplomacy, including 2025 media disputes. Japan diversifies supply chains through the Chip 4 initiative, cutting reliance on Chinese rare earths and semiconductors amid Beijing's military growth. China-EU relations emphasize trade, with €732 billion in 2024 goods exchange—China supplying 21.3% of EU imports and receiving 8.3% of China's exports. The EU imposed up to 45% tariffs on Chinese electric vehicles in 2024 over subsidies, plus probes into steel and procurement. Divergences arise from China's Russia support, as their trade doubled to $245 billion in 2024 during the Ukraine conflict. Labeling China a "systemic rival," the EU pursues de-risking in technologies while cooperating on climate via the stalled 2020 Comprehensive Agreement on Investment, hindered by human rights and access issues.

Territorial Disputes and Regional Influence

China maintains territorial claims over Taiwan, asserting it as a renegade province despite never having governed the island since the Republic of China's retreat there in 1949 following the Chinese Civil War. The People's Republic of China (PRC) views reunification as a core interest, employing military intimidation including large-scale exercises simulating blockades, with over 1,700 PLA aircraft incursions into Taiwan's air defense identification zone recorded by October 2024. Historical precedents like the 1954–1955 and 1958 Taiwan Strait Crises, involving PRC artillery bombardments of offshore islands, underscore the persistent threat, though no full-scale invasion has occurred. These actions amplify regional tensions, deterring investment and prompting alliances like AUKUS among affected states wary of PRC coercion. In the South China Sea, China delineates its claims via the "nine-dash line," encompassing roughly 90% of the sea and overlapping exclusive economic zones of Vietnam, the Philippines, Malaysia, and Brunei, a demarcation originating in 1947 maps but lacking legal basis under the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea. Since 2013, China has constructed over 3,200 acres of artificial islands on reefs like Fiery Cross and Mischief, equipping them with airstrips, missile systems, and radar, enabling de facto control despite a 2016 Permanent Court of Arbitration ruling invalidating the claims, which Beijing rejected outright. Escalations include water cannon attacks and ramming incidents against Philippine vessels at Second Thomas Shoal in 2023–2024, resulting in injuries and vessel damage, tactics characterized as gray-zone aggression to erode neighbors' sovereignty without triggering full conflict. These moves secure maritime routes carrying $3.4 trillion in annual trade and potential oil/gas reserves estimated at 11 billion barrels and 190 trillion cubic feet, bolstering China's regional dominance while straining ASEAN unity. The East China Sea dispute centers on the Senkaku/Diaoyu Islands, administered by Japan since 1972 but claimed by China based on historical assertions from the 14th century, though uncontested by the Qing dynasty until resource discoveries in the 1960s. Tensions surged after Japan's 2012 nationalization of three islets, prompting Chinese government vessels to enter contiguous zones repeatedly—over 300 incursions by 2024—and the unilateral declaration of an East China Sea Air Defense Identification Zone in 2013 overlapping Japan's. China's Coast Guard activities hit record highs in 2024, deploying larger armed ships to assert presence amid fisheries and potential hydrocarbon resources. This assertiveness risks miscalculation, given mutual defense ties like the U.S.-Japan alliance covering the islets, and reflects China's pattern of leveraging paramilitary forces to contest without conventional war. Along the 3,488 km Sino-Indian border, disputes persist over Aksai Chin (claimed by India but controlled by China) and Arunachal Pradesh (claimed by China as South Tibet), rooted in undefined colonial-era lines like the 1914 McMahon Line. The 1962 war saw China advance 60 km into Indian territory before unilateral withdrawal, killing around 1,400 Indian troops, while the 2020 Galwan Valley clash resulted in 20 Indian and an undisclosed number of Chinese deaths from melee weapons, marking the first fatalities since 1975. Partial disengagements occurred by 2021, but thousands of troops remain deployed, with infrastructure builds like China's 400+ border villages enabling salami-slicing advances. These frictions, compounded by China's alliances with Pakistan, constrain India's regional posture and fuel quadrilateral security dialogues. China's approach to these disputes—emphasizing bilateral negotiations over multilateral forums, rejecting adverse rulings, and employing coast guard/militia harassment—projects influence through salami-slicing and economic leverage, such as trade sanctions on disputants like Australia and Norway. This strategy, evident in over 100 maritime militia vessels active in contested areas, erodes international norms and prompts counterbalancing, including freedom of navigation operations by the U.S. Navy since 2015, yet secures de facto gains in resource access and strategic denial. Outcomes hinge on deterrence credibility, as unchecked assertiveness risks alienating neighbors and accelerating alliances against PRC hegemony.

Belt and Road Initiative and Soft Power

The Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), announced by President Xi Jinping in 2013, builds infrastructure, trade, and investment networks to link China with over 150 countries in Asia, Europe, Africa, and elsewhere. It features six overland economic corridors and a maritime silk road, funding ports, railways, highways, and energy projects. Chinese engagement topped $1.3 trillion by July 2025, with first-half-2025 contracts at $66.2 billion and non-financial investments at $57.1 billion amid economic headwinds. Proponents emphasize infrastructure benefits, including 20-30% trade volume increases in key corridors. Yet the initiative's state-backed, often non-concessional loans have prompted debt sustainability worries, elevating debt-to-GDP ratios in fragile economies. By 2023, at least eight countries risked distress or default, as with Sri Lanka's 2022 Hambantota port concession after missing $1.5 billion in payments. Critics point to opaque terms, scant multilateral scrutiny, and Chinese firm preferences that hike costs and bypass local input. A 2025 "BRI 2.0" shift toward smaller, greener projects seeks to address criticism, but execution varies. As a pillar of China's soft power, the BRI projects benevolent partnership to offset Western financing sway. However, debt leverage perceptions of coercion—evident in Djibouti's base access—erode goodwill. Cultural outreach via over 500 Confucius Institutes (peaking by 2019) has waned, with more than 100 closed by 2025 over ideological and espionage concerns. State media like CGTN and "wolf warrior" diplomacy, marked by assertive defenses of interests, often heighten adverse views. China placed second in the 2025 Brand Finance Global Soft Power Index for economic clout but lagged in culture and governance, with unfavorable ratings over 70% in democracies tied to authoritarianism and rights issues. Such tactics garner domestic backing yet foster abroad images of expansionism. Annual cultural diplomacy outlays surpass $10 billion, but information curbs and opacity constrain rivalry with democratic models.

Controversies

Domestic Repression and Policy Failures

The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) maintains domestic control through extensive surveillance, censorship, and targeted suppression of perceived threats, including ethnic minorities, dissident groups, and political opponents. In Xinjiang, authorities have detained over one million Uyghurs and other Turkic Muslims in internment camps since 2017, involving forced labor, political indoctrination, and cultural erasure, as evidenced by leaked documents, satellite imagery, and survivor testimonies. These facilities, officially termed "vocational education centers," expanded rapidly after 2016, with ongoing abuses reported as of 2025 despite partial releases. In Hong Kong, the 2020 National Security Law criminalized secession, subversion, terrorism, and foreign collusion, leading to over 200 arrests by 2025, the closure of pro-democracy media outlets, and erosion of judicial independence, fundamentally altering the city's autonomy promised under the 1997 handover. The law's vague provisions enabled suppression of protests and critical speech, with authorities prosecuting figures for actions like chanting slogans or publishing books. Repression extends to spiritual and religious groups, notably Falun Gong and unregistered Christian churches, with the former—a qigong-based practice that grew to tens of millions of adherents by 1999—facing a nationwide eradication campaign involving mass arrests, torture, and organ harvesting allegations, and practitioners subjected to extrajudicial killings and forced renunciations persisting into 2025 despite international condemnation; unregistered Christian churches, operating as house churches outside state-sanctioned bodies, encounter raids, arrests of leaders, and pressure to affiliate with official organizations. Internet censorship via the Great Firewall blocks access to major foreign sites, including search engines like Google and Western social media apps such as Facebook, Twitter (X), Instagram, and YouTube, using IP filtering and keyword detection to enforce compliance, with over 10,000 domains restricted as of recent assessments. The social credit system, while not a unified personal score as often portrayed, integrates data from cameras, apps, and records to punish "untrustworthy" behavior through blacklists restricting travel or loans, amplifying state control over 1.4 billion citizens. Policy missteps have compounded these controls with socioeconomic fallout. The one-child policy, enforced from 1979 to 2015 with fines, sterilizations, and abortions, skewed the sex ratio to 118 boys per 100 girls by 2005, fostering gender imbalances, eldercare burdens, and a shrinking workforce amid rapid aging—China's fertility rate fell to 1.09 by 2022. The zero-COVID strategy, pursued until late 2022 with city-wide lockdowns, stifled growth by 2-3% annually, disrupting supply chains and causing youth unemployment to spike above 20%, as factories halted and consumers withheld spending. Recent interventions, including the 2021 crackdown on property developers via "three red lines" debt limits, triggered the Evergrande default—$300 billion in liabilities—leading to sector contraction, ghost cities, and GDP drag persisting into 2025, with Evergrande delisted from Hong Kong exchanges in August. These failures stem from state-directed credit allocation prioritizing quantity over sustainability, eroding household wealth tied to real estate (70% of assets).

International Espionage and Economic Practices

China conducts extensive international espionage, mainly through state-sponsored actors linked to the Ministry of State Security and People's Liberation Army. These operations target intellectual property, military technologies, and sensitive data from foreign governments and companies. A Center for Strategic and International Studies survey recorded 224 cases of Chinese espionage against the United States since 2000, including cyber intrusions, human intelligence, and economic sabotage. The U.S. Department of Justice has issued multiple indictments; examples include charges against twelve individuals tied to APT27 in March 2025 for global hacks across sectors, and against two hackers in December 2018 for stealing aviation and pharmaceutical data worldwide. Economic espionage forms a core element, with the FBI estimating that 80% of its economic espionage cases benefit China. Intellectual property theft costs the U.S. economy $225–600 billion annually, with China accounting for 50–80% of cases per FBI data; other estimates range from $300–600 billion yearly. Operations like APT41's campaign extracted trillions in IP from about 30 multinational firms in technology and healthcare. These efforts aid policies such as "Made in China 2025" by enabling rapid technological advancement with limited domestic innovation. Beyond cyber and human methods, China uses coercive economic practices for technology transfer, including forced technology transfer that ties market access to IP sharing. Foreign firms often must form joint ventures with local partners, facing ownership limits like 50% in automotive sectors, which prompt IP disclosure for approvals—practices noted in U.S. Trade Representative reviews despite 2019–2020 trade pledges. The U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission points to foreign investment, venture capital, and programs like the Thousand Talents Plan for reverse engineering and talent acquisition. U.S. Government Accountability Office reports describe these alongside subsidies and predatory pricing in steel and solar panels as unfair market distortions. Beijing views such exchanges as voluntary and typical for developing economies, but firm surveys and enforcement data show systemic coercion that erodes fair trade reciprocity.

Global Health and Geopolitical Tensions

China's response to the pandemic raised global health concerns, especially over the virus's origins in . A December 2024 U.S. House Select Subcommittee report concluded that a laboratory incident at the was most likely, pointing to gain-of-function research on bat coronaviruses and biosafety issues. The U.S. Director of National Intelligence's 2021 assessment found the Intelligence Community leaning toward natural zoonotic spillover, though agencies like the FBI and Department of Energy favored a lab incident with low to moderate confidence, amid China's limits on data sharing and early sample destruction. Chinese officials suppressed early warnings from whistleblowers, such as doctor in December 2019, and delayed public alerts, leading to accusations of a cover-up that impeded international responses. These transparency gaps intensified geopolitical strains. Western nations, including the U.S., sought independent probes that China rejected, restricting access in 2021 and dismissing lab-leak theories as political. China countered with "," deflecting blame through claims of U.S. origins at Fort Detrick and emphasizing its aid over Western contributions. This approach, prominent from 2020, heightened tensions with the U.S. and allies, linking health disputes to wider rivalries. China's vaccine exports, like Sinovac and Sinopharm via the , sought influence in developing countries but drew criticism for favoring geopolitics over equitable access, with some efficacy data withheld. Tensions also involved military actions in the and . From 2020 to 2025, China built and armed artificial islands, ignored a 2016 arbitral ruling, and conducted drills overlapping Philippine and Vietnamese claims, prompting U.S. operations and alliances like AUKUS. Toward Taiwan, incursions exceeded 1,700 aircraft detections in 2022, alongside blockade simulations, amid Beijing's view of U.S. arms sales and Taiwan's democracy as provocations. Combined with health disputes, these moves highlighted unilateralism: China's rising WHO role, as U.S. funding declined post-2020, allowed narrative influence on origins and governance, though ongoing opacity reduced trust. U.S. officials and critics contend this blend of health strategy and territorial actions emphasizes regime protection over open collaboration, fostering zero-sum competition with the West.

References

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