Without pension reform, China is leaving its rural elderly out in the cold

“Rural heating problems in Hebei cannot wait any longer” declared a recent report in Farmers’ Daily. It described a disturbing reality in parts of northern China: elderly villagers who would rather shiver through freezing temperatures than turn on their heaters, because they simply cannot afford the cost. For many urban readers, this may sound implausible. For millions of rural elderly, it is routine.

On the surface, the problem appears to be a side effect of China’s well-intentioned environmental reforms. Beginning in the early 2010s, large-scale “coal-to-gas” heating programmes were rolled out across northern China to reduce air pollution. Rural households were banned from burning coal and required to switch to cleaner, but far more expensive, natural gas.

In its early years, generous government subsidies cushioned the transition. Over time, those subsidies have been reduced, even as gas prices have risen. For elderly farmers living on pensions of roughly 100 to 200 yuan (US$28.65) a month – barely enough to cover basic necessities – heating has become unaffordable

But framing this merely as an energy or environmental policy problem misses the deeper issue. The Farmers’ Daily report exposes a structural weakness in China’s rural pension system, one that incremental adjustments can no longer conceal.
Rural pension reform is hardly new. It has been debated for years by policymakers and economists, often in abstract terms of fiscal sustainability and demographic pressure. The issue returned to public attention after veteran commentator Hu Xijin published a widely read social media post in late December calling for a substantial increase in farmers’ pensions.

He suggested funding it through cuts to export tax rebates and proposed raising monthly pensions to over 600 yuan. Supporters welcomed his bluntness; critics questioned the feasibility and fiscal priorities. What the debate revealed was how unresolved, and uncomfortable, the issue remains.

I agree with Hu’s core argument: resources must be reallocated to support the most vulnerable rural poor, although reducing export tax rebates should not be seen as the only solution.

Unlike urban workers with employer-linked retirement plans, rural elderly people have traditionally depended on their children for support. That informal social contract is breaking down. Younger villagers have migrated to cities in search of a better life. Even when they send money home, support is often irregular, especially when urban employment weakens.

The rural pension was designed as a supplement, not a living income. For many elderly villagers, however, it has become the only guaranteed support they have.

China’s modern prosperity was built alongside a urban-rural divide. Rural residents, referred to as “muddy legs”, receive weaker welfare protection despite their central role in sustaining the country’s development. Although real efforts have been made since the 2000s to improve the safety net in rural areas, they began from a very low baseline.
The resulting gap in old-age security is hard to reconcile with the government’s stated goals of common prosperity, social equity and balanced development. While urban retirees often enjoy pensions of several thousand yuan a month, rural pensions remain low.

This makes the issue of rural pensions a moral one. A country – especially one that calls itself socialist – that allows people who spent their lives working the land to face old age without the means to keep warm has failed to honour their contribution. When pensions barely sustain survival, retirement ceases to be a basic right and becomes a personal gamble.

The consequences are not only moral but economic and political. An ageing rural population with no financial security suppresses consumption, increases health risks and creates pockets of hardship that rarely appear in official data. It also shifts growing responsibility onto local governments that already operate with limited fiscal capacity.

The Farmers’ Daily report resonated precisely because it cut through the abstraction. Its account was echoed, quietly but tellingly, by a former helper of mine in Hebei, who said heating costs have risen so sharply that villagers now ration warmth, describing the act of switching on the heater as “burning money”. She herself keeps the heating to a minimum, piling on layers, including an overcoat, indoors.

Some argue that targeted subsidies or seasonal help can ease such hardship. But these are stopgap measures layered onto a fragile foundation. Without a meaningful increase in rural pensions, every new policy shock – whether in energy reform, healthcare costs or inflation – will continue to push the most vulnerable closer to the edge.

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