What is the current population in China, and is it still the largest in the world?
With just over 1.3 billion people (1,330,044,605 as of mid-2008), China is the world’s largest and most populous country. As the world’s population is approximately 6.7 billion, China represents a full 20% of the world’s population so one in every five people on the planet is a resident of China. China’s population growth has been somewhat slowed by the one child policy, in effect since 1979. As recently as 1950, China’s population was a mere 563 million. The population grew dramatically through the following decades to one billion in the early 1980s. China’s total fertility rate is 1.7, which means that, on average, each woman gives birth to 1.7 children throughout her life. The necessary total fertility rate for a stable population is 2.1; nonetheless, China’s population is expected to grow over the next few decades. This can be attributed to immigration and a decrease in infant mortality and a decrease in death rate as national health improves. By the late 2010s, China’s population