China announces new retirement ages, plans to foster 'new culture of marriage and child-bearing'

A group of young Chinese men in white shirts stand on a production line inspecting items.

China's retirement age is one of the youngest in the world, having not been raised since the 1950s. (Reuters: Ellen Zhang)

In short:

Beijing will from next year begin gradually raising China's retirement age, which currently sits at an unusually low 60 for men and 50 or 55 for women.

The new age will eventually be 63 for men and 55 or 58 for women, a change economists say is long overdue considering the pressure being put on the state pension system by China's aging workforce.

What's next?

China's National Health Commission is looking even further ahead, saying it will focus more efforts on promoting positive perspectives on marriage and childbirth to address the country's shrinking population.