The Economist December 18th 2021 China 33
A
s china ages, worriesaremounting
aboutthementalhealthofitselderly
population.Globally,suiciderates
amongoldpeopletendtobehigherthan
average.InChinathisisespeciallytrue.
Peoplethereaged 70 andabovekillthem
selvesatmorethanfourtimestherateof
thegeneralpopulation,comparedwith
arounda quartermoreinAmerica.Lone
linessandinadequatehealthcareare
amongthemainreasons.
Itisnotallbadnews.Inthe1990s
China’ssuicideratewasamongthehigh
estintheworld.Fatalselfharmwas
strikinglycommonamongyoungwom
eninthecountryside,whohadeasy
accesstolethalpesticides.Butinthepast
20 years,China’sratehasdeclinedmore
thanothercountry’s,mainlyasa result
ofstrictercontrolsonthosechemicals
andmigrationtocities,wheresuch
poisonsareevenhardertoobtain.In
2019 it wasnineper100,000,compared
with 14 inAmericaand 19 inJapan.
Amongpeopleaged 70 orover,the
suicideratehasalsodroppedsince1990,
from 78 per100,000to35.Butasa pro
portionofallsuicides,thosebyelderly
peoplehaverisenfrom14%to31%.In
part,thatisbecausetheelderly’sshareof
thepopulationhasrisen,too,from3.4%
in 1990 to6.8%today.Butbetween 1990
and 2017 suicideratesamongtheoldfell
theleastofanyagegroup.
Povertyanda lackofsocialservices
exacerbatetheproblem,asdoesinternal
migration:youngerpeopleoftenleave
olderfamilymembersbehindinthe
countryside.Becauseoffallingbirth
rates,elderlypeoplehavefeweryoung
sterstolookafterthem.Researchpub
lishedinMarchbya groupofacademics
inAmericaandChina,includingHan
mingFangoftheUniversityofPenn
sylvania,usesanunusuallygranularset
ofdatafromtheChineseCentrefor
DiseaseControlandPreventiontodem
onstratetheimpactofloneliness.It
showsthattheweeklysuiciderate
amongtheelderly—thoseover65,inthis
case—decreasesbymorethanonetenth
duringtheChineseNewYearholiday,
whenfamiliesreunite(seechart).The
holidaydoesnotappeartoaffectsuicides
amongyoungerpeople.
Thesituationmaygetworse.Atleast
halfoftheelderlyareemptynesters,
statemediasay.Theirnumbersaresurg
ing.In 2013 Chinapasseda lawrequiring
thosewholiveapartfromelderlyparents
to“frequentlyvisitorsendgreetings”.It
has,ofcourse,proveddifficulttoen
force.OnNovember24ththegovern
mentpublishedguidelinesoncarefor
theelderly,includingadvicethatyoung
adultsshouldlivewith,orcloseto,their
parents.Manyonlinecommentswere
derisory.Howaboutscrappinghouse
holdregistrationrulesthatrestrict
migrants’accesstowelfareinthecities,
someasked?Onlythenmightageing
parentsleavethevillagesandjointheir
urbanoffspring.
Elderlysuicide
Old and sad
Suicidesbyruralwomenhavedeclined.Nowtheelderlyarethebiggestconcern
The solace of company
China, change in suicide rate among over- 65s
2013-17, %
Source:“Familycompanionshipandelderlysuicide: evidence
fromtheChineseLunarNewYear”,byH.Fang,Z. Lei, L. Lin
andP. Zhang,NBERworkingpaper,March 2021
432101234
Weeksbefore/afterChinese New Year
10
5
0
-5
-10
-15
-20
Central estimate
5% confidence
interval
and eastern Europe, calling it divisive.
There was some grumbling among eu
politicians and officials when Lithuania
first announced the opening of a “Taiwan
ese Representative Office” in Vilnius. Did
Lithuania really have to approve that par
ticular name, fellow Europeans muttered?
After all, China tolerates overseas trade of
fices that are named after Taiwan’s capital,
Taipei. The mood now is different. China’s
eagerness to use undeclared forms of eco
nomic and diplomatic coercion is breaking
new ground. In contrast with the cold war
against the Soviet Union, the concern is
not that China is bent on exporting revolu
tion or overthrowing global capitalism. In
stead, China is seen as a disrupter of the
rulesbased order: willing to use instru
ments of commerce and diplomatic inter
course as weapons, even as Chinese lead
ers talk up multilateralism and free trade.
China’s treatment of Lithuania follows a
pattern seen in other recent rows with
American allies. Among them are Australia
and Canada, which have suffered unac
knowledged trade boycotts and seen citi
zens imprisoned as hostages in bilateral
disputes. Before that, it was the turn of Ja
pan and South Korea to face undeclared
economic sanctions for displeasing China.
For some weeks, importers have been
unable to list Lithuania as a country of ori
gin in Chinese customs databases, making
it impossible to clear shipments (Lithuania
does not export much to China, however).
German and French firms have been
warned that they may not ship goods with
Lithuanian components to China, poten
tially blocking hundreds of containers al
ready in transit. There are rumours that the
People’s Bank of China, the central bank,
has forbidden banks from issuing letters of
credit covering trade in or out of any port
in the Baltic states. When eu officials
raised these concerns, Chinese authorities
retorted that Lithuania is lying and that the
eushould beware of being taken hostage
by a tiny troublemaker.
In its desire to punish Lithuania, China
is betting that bigger eupowers will think
of China’s market and abandon the Baltic
minnow. In doing so, China overlooks the
extent to which small or midranking
European countries have a horror of a
world in which great powers set their own
rules. Europeans loathed Mr Trump for his
Americafirst trade policies. They detest
Chinafirst bullying just as much, especial
ly when it threatens the integrity of the
European single market.
First they came for Lithuania
In eucouncils even Hungary, which is nor
mally friendly to China, is speaking up for
Lithuania. On November 30th France’s
president, Emmanuel Macron, told Lithua
nia’s, Gitanas Nauseda, that France sees
engagement with major powers as a vital
interest—but puts a higher priority still on
eusolidarity. On December 8th two senior
euofficials warned that the apparent trade
ban, if confirmed, may put China in breach
of its World Trade Organisation obliga
tions. Soon afterwards the eu unveiled
new instruments to retaliate against eco
nomic coercion by third countries. Free
traders within the bloc doubt whether such
tools can work. But the same governments
are also troubled by China’s behaviour.
When the new German chancellor, Olaf
Scholz, has his first bilateral call with Xi
Jinping, China’s president, Lithuania will
surely be on the agenda. All in all, 2021
ends with EuropeChina relations in dire
shape. Pessimistic envoys in Beijing worry
that Chinese leaders do not care. They fear
that the regime is intoxicated by national
ism. They also detect a conviction that it is
the destiny of a rising China to struggle
with a fading America. Solidarity with
Lithuania may prove fleeting; Europeans
may start accommodating Chinaonother
issues. But the chasing of an embassyfrom
Beijing will not be quickly forgotten.n