NY Times November 23, 2010
Life Expectancy in China Rising Slowly, Despite Economic Surge
By DAVID LEONHARDT

A quick quiz: Which of the following countries has had the smallest 
increase in life expectancy since 1990 — Bangladesh, China, Pakistan, 
South Korea or Sudan?

The answer is not war-torn Sudan or tumultuous Pakistan. It isn’t South 
Korea, which started from a higher level than any of the others. And it 
isn’t abjectly poor Bangladesh.

It’s China, the great economic success story of the last two decades and 
the country that inspires fear and envy around the world. Yet when 
measured on one of most important yardsticks of all, China does not look 
so impressive.

 From 1990 to 2008, life expectancy in China rose 5.1 years, to 73.1, 
according to a World Bank compilation of United Nations data. Nearly 
every other big developing country, be it Brazil, Egypt, Ethiopia, 
India, Indonesia or Iran, had a bigger increase over that span, despite 
much slower economic growth. Since 2000, most of Western Europe, 
Australia and Israel, all of which started with higher life expectancy, 
have also outpaced China.

The moral? Economic growth makes almost any societal problem easier to 
solve, but growth doesn’t guarantee better lives — or better health — 
for everyone. That’s been true for centuries. The rate of growth and the 
kind of growth both matter.

If you scan the globe today, you may end up wondering whether any 
country has landed on the right mix. Europe offers a good life to many 
people, with generous vacations, parental leaves and health benefits, 
but its economies have been growing slowly, which is one reason its 
debts are so onerous.

The United States grew more quickly than Europe in recent decades, but 
many of the gains flowed to a small slice of the population. Median 
household income, adjusted for inflation, actually fell from 2000 to 
2007 — and has fallen more since the financial crisis began in 2007.

China can sometimes look like the economy of the future, having grown 
stunningly fast for almost 30 years now, lifting hundreds of millions of 
people out of poverty. But it, too, has real problems. Above all, its 
growth has been uneven. The coast has benefited much more than the 
interior. Almost everywhere, some aspects of life have improved much 
more than others.

Whether China can switch to a more balanced form of growth, as its 
leaders have vowed, will obviously have a big effect on the rest of the 
global economy. Yet it’s worth remembering that the biggest impact will 
be on the one-sixth of the world’s population who live in China. And 
arguably the best example is the fact that the country has grown vastly 
wealthier but only modestly healthier.

There is an intriguing parallel here to the Industrial Revolution. The 
eminent economist Richard Easterlin has noted that longevity and health 
did not improve much when economic growth took off in the early 19th 
century.

With rising incomes, people could afford better food, clothing and 
shelter. But they were also exposed to more disease because so many of 
them were moving to cities. The combined effect appears to have been 
“stagnation or, at best, mild improvement in life expectancy,” Mr. 
Easterlin has written.

The Mortality Revolution, as he calls it, did not occur for almost 
another a century. It depended on relatively cheap investments in public 
health, like sanitation, and on the spread of scientific methods.

Similarly, in today’s China, many more people have acquired indoor 
plumbing, heating, air-conditioning or other basics. Other aspects of 
the boom, however, have pushed in the opposite direction.

As in the Industrial Revolution, many people have left the countryside 
and poured into crowded cities. Accidents have become common, like the 
Shanghai fire last week or a series of workplace tragedies in recent 
months. Obesity is rising. Pollution is terrible.

I recently spent some time in China, and despite everything I’d heard in 
advance about the pollution, I was still taken aback. The tops of 
skyscrapers in Beijing can be hard to see from the street. Breathing the 
smog can feel like having a permanent low-grade sinus infection. For the 
Chinese, cancer has displaced strokes as the leading cause of death, 
partly because of pollution, notes Yang Lu of the Keck School of 
Medicine at the University of Southern California.

Finally, there is the medical system itself. The dismantling of 
state-run industrial companies over the last two decades has ended the 
cradle-to-grave benefits system known as the iron rice bowl. In its 
place was a market-based medical system many Chinese could not afford. 
Even in emergencies, people sometimes had to bring cash to the hospital 
to get treatment.

Early last year, the Chinese government began expanding health insurance 
coverage, with the goal of making it universal by 2020. The initial 
signs look pretty good. The World Bank does not have data past 2008, but 
numbers published by the C.I.A. suggest that life expectancy has risen 
in the last two years. In my travels, I visited a simple, clean clinic 
in rural northern China that seemed to be providing the kind of basic 
care that could make a huge difference.

Of course, whatever the problems with China’s boom, it still has 
significantly improved the lives of its citizens. Many fewer of them 
live in grinding poverty, and the population is living longer, even if 
the gains have not been as large as in many other countries.

Over any extended period, economic growth is probably necessary for 
higher living standards. It’s just not enough. As Tsung-Mei Cheng, a 
health policy expert at Princeton, argues, “Economists and the media 
tend to pay too much attention to the growth of G.D.P. over all, and not 
enough to its distribution.”

There is, after all, another large country with unimpressive recent 
gains in life expectancy, even smaller than China’s. That’s right: the 
United States. Since 1990, we have been passed by Chile, Denmark, 
Slovenia and South Korea, among others. China is still five years behind 
us, but it’s gaining.

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