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I. Basic Figures
- Name:
Hainan Province
- Areas:
339.2 thousand km2
- Population:
7.2453 million (registered population by the end of 1997)
- Provincial
Capital: Haikou City
- Geography:
Hainan Province is situated at the southern end of China between
358N-2010N and 10837E-11750E, being in the tropical and subtropical
zone. Administrative areas of Hainan include Hainandao Island, Nansha,
Xisha, Zhongsha Archipelagos and their sea areas. It faces Leizhou
Peninsula across Qiongzhou Channel to the north, Vietnam across the
North Bay to the west, and Malaysia and Indonesia across the South
China Sea to the south, and is closely joined by the South China Sea
and islands. Hainan is China's second largest island, but the smallest
province.
- Natural
Resources: Hainan is a tropical island and has a vast stretch
of tropical primeval forests, mountain range, rivers and beaches. There
are over 560 species of animals and 4200 types of plants on the island.
It has great mineral reserves and is rich in oil and natural gas. Among
the minerals of proved deposits, iron-ore and arenaceous quartz
deposits rank the 1st in China, natural gas, zirconium, nitrogenous
fertilizer rock and gems the 2nd, titanium the 3rd, and oil-shale the
4th. Tourism becomes a leading industry in Hainan.
- Economy:
In 1997, the gross domestic product of Hainan was 40.986 billion yuan,
per capita gross domestic product 5,698 yuan, and the gross industrial
and agricultural output value 30.65043 billion yuan. The total imports
and exports were 1,949.01 million US dollars, total provincial
government revenue 3.16485 billion yuan, and the yield of grain 2.2309
million tons.
- People's
Life: By the end of 1997, there were 3.4165 million employed,
and the total wages of the staff and workers were 5.809 billion yuan,
with per capita wage of 5,664 yuan. The total social insurance and
welfare funds of the employed and retired staff and workers were
1.773909 billion yuan. The per capita annual disposable income of urban
households was 4,850 yuan, and the per capita net income of the rural
households was 2,382 yuan. The per capita living floor space was 13.99
square meters for urban residents and 20.29 square meters for the rural
residents. The outstanding amount of savings deposit in urban and rural
areas by the end of the year was 36.26146 billion yuan, with the per
capita level of 5,041.2 yuan. The entire province had 21,704 hospital
beds and 32,458 medical personal. There was 2.87 hospital beds per
1,000 persons.
- Education:
By the end of 1997, there were 5 higher education institutions in
Hainan, with the number of enrolled students 12,783 and that of
teachers 1,380; 574 specialized secondary schools with 404.285 thousand
enrolled students and 24.614 thousand teachers; 494 secondary schools
with 367.522 thousand enrolled students and 21.565 thousand teachers;
and 4,330 primary schools with 1,090.799 thousand enrolled students and
49.47 thousand teachers.
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II. Population Situation
1.
Size and Distribution
In
the 1990 fourth national population census, the population of Hainan
counted 655.81 million, accounting for 0.85% of the national total and
ranking 27th among the provinces of China. Population density was 193
persons per square kilometers, which ranks the 16th in the country. The
increase of population density is more rapid in Hainan Province than in
the country as a whole. 80% of the population are rural residents;
population density is higher in urban than the rural areas; the
northern and eastern parts are more populous, while the central
mountainous areas are sparsely populated. The population is
increasingly distributed from the central mountainous areas to the
coastal areas. Hainan is home to 38 ethnic minority groups who mainly
locate in the south-central mountainous areas.
2.
Population History
Since
the founding of the People's Republic of China, the population of
Hainan has experienced 5 phases between which the rates of population
growth are highly varied. With annual population increment of 8.96
thousand and annual population growth rate of 3.93%, 1950-57 witnessed
a most rapid growth of the population. Population growth was slowed
down between 1958-61, seeing the annual increment down to 31.6
thousand. However, the pace of population growth was dramatically
accelerated in 1962-1969 as a result of the compensating baby boom,
which produced annually 140 thousand babies. A period of steady growth
then followed between 1978 and 1980, during which the birth rate
averaged at around 23‰, and the population reproduction was following a
planned development. 1981-1990 was a phase of great effect of the
family planning program. Currently the population reproduction in
Hainan Province is well in the transition from a traditional to a
modern regime.
3.
Population Structure by Sex and Age
The
sex ratio of the total population has been on the increase, as
reflected in the 4 population censuses. Sex ratio went from 98.52 in
1953 and 102.51 in 1964 up to 105.28 in 1982 and 108.91 in 1990. Sex
ratios in Hainan Province were characterized by "4 highs and 1 low",
namely, high sex ratio for the total population, high sex ratio at
birth, high sex ratio for the adult population, high sex ratio for the
unmarried young population, and low sex ratio for the elderly
population. The total population sex ratio was only next to Guangxi
Zhuang Autonomous Region, the 2nd highest in China. According to the
household statistics from the Provincial Bureau of Public Security, in
1997, males and females numbered 3,793.6 thousand and 3,451.7 thousand
respectively, correspondingly constituting 52.36% and 47.64% of the
total population, and sex ratio of the total population was 108.08.
In the
1997 population of Hainan, 2,361 thousand people were at ages 0-14,
representing 32.65% of the total; 4,715 thousand people were at ages
15-64, representing 65.1%; and 483 thousand people were at ages 65 and
over, representing 6.7%.
4.
Fertility Level and Changes
Fertility
has been declined substantially since the establishment of the
province, from a total fertility rate (TFR) of 4.295 in 1981 and 2.93
in 1989 to that of 2.15 in 1997. The 1997 crude birth rate in Hainan
Province was 19.18‰ and the natural increase rate 13.56‰. Population
projections anticipate sustained growth of the population, which would
hit 10 million by 2018 under a high fertility scenario projection.
5.
Mortality and Life Expectancy
The
crude death rate (CDR) stood as high as 30‰ in Hainan before the
founding of the People’s Republic of China. The last five decades are
characterized by five distinct phases in mortality changes: mortality
decline, abnormal rise, steady decline, small increase, and stability
at low level. CDR reached a relatively low level of 5.62‰ in 1997.
There is a marked difference in mortality between the urban and rural
areas, the rural areas being considerably higher than the urban areas.
Mortality is observed high among the ethnic minority groups. Males have
a higher mortality than females, and mortality lowers at younger ages
and increases with advancement of ages.
Life
expectancy at birth, which was only around 40 before 1949, was
estimated 66.93 for males and 73.28 for females according to the 1990
population census. Major causes of death in recent years have
concentrated on chronic diseases such as cardiovascular diseases,
cancers, and heart diseases. Once the technological and medical
breakthroughs occur in treating these diseases, new leaps in the life
expectancy improvement is expected also.
6.
Marriage Status, Family Size and Type
The
1990 population census counted 4,388.8 thousand persons of age 15 and
over, of whom 28.42% were never married, 64.92% married, 6.09% widowed,
and 0.57% divorced. The never marrying rates are positively correlated
with the years of schooling. Lower education groups have higher rates
of widowhood, divorce rates are observed higher for college education
and illiterate groups than for the intermediate groups. Proportions of
the never married are higher for the urban than for the rural
residences. Proportions of persons with spouses are higher in the towns
than in the cities and counties. The divorce rates are higher in
counties than in cities and towns. Never marrying rates and divorce
rates are higher for males than for females, and females have higher
rates of married and widowed than males.
Household
size has been shrinking in Hainan, with the mean size of the households
dropping from 4.61 persons in 1988 to 4.49 in 1997. The sampling survey
of population changes shows that 38.8% of the households were stem
families of 4 or 5 persons.
7.
Aging of Population
In
1990, Hainan had an elderly population aged 60 and over of 538.1
thousand, males being 233.8 thousand and females 304.3 thousand, and
the percentage of elderly being 8.21%. The elderly population at ages
65 and over was 354.5 thousand, accounting for 5.41% of the total
population. The oldest old population aged 80 and over was 57 thousand.
As age increases, the female elderly increasingly outnumbers the male
elderly. As a result of the growing elderly population, the percentage
aged 65 and above went from 3.91% in 1964 up to 5.47% in 1990. The
elderly are predominantly rural in Hainan, 80.89% of the 538.1 thousand
elderly persons aged 65 and above lived in rural areas while the rest
19.11% living in the urban areas. The age structure of the population
of Hainan is typical of an adult type.
8.
Population Quality
Looking
at the educational composition of the population of Hainan, the college
education group numbered 81.8 thousand or 1.81% of the population aged
15 and above. There was an increment of 60.1 thousand or 277.83%
increase in the college education group between 1982 and 1990. There
were 679.1 thousand persons or 15.07% with senior secondary education,
which increased by 145.5 thousand or 27.28% between 1982 and 1990. The
junior secondary education group had a population of 1475.5 thousand or
32.75%, observing 533.3 thousand or 56.60% increase between 1982-1990.
The primary school education population grew by 20.12% in 1982-1990,
reaching 2269.3 thousand or 50.37%. Increases in all categories of
education but decreases in the illiterate group featured the
educational composition of the population of Hainan. The illiterate
rate dropped, the top education groups went up in their percentages,
and the overall education of Hainan¢
s population is at the intermediate level among the provinces of China.
9.
Migration and Population Floating
According
to the results of the 1990 population census, larger inter-provincial
than intra-provincial in-migration characterized migration in the
recent 5 years, the neighboring provinces being the major places of
origin. There were more rural than urban in-migrants, and migration for
seeking jobs or doing business occupied the first place. As a major
place of tourism in China, recent years have seen a tremendous increase
in the visitors for sightseeing.
10.
Population, Resources and Environment
The
rapid growth of the population of Hainan has been aggravating the
population pressure on the resources and intensifying the contradiction
between the population and the environment. Population expansion led to
environmental pollution and resource depletion as a result of
exploiting the resources and destroying the environment to meet the
growing needs of the people in improving their lives. The heavy
population burden impeded economic construction and development, and
environmental degradation put constraints on the subsistence of the
population.
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