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From ditch digging to herding donkeys, no rest for China’s rural seniors

With a swift step on her shovel and tug of her hand, Gao Chunlian uproots a bunch of green onions, shakes off the dirt, and passes it to her husband to bag. Whether tending their vegetable garden or signing on with road crews, Ms. Gao shoulders the heavier work these days, with her husband being too feeble to farm.

“As old as I am, I still have to work,” says the sexagenarian, sweeping back a loose strand of hair outside her farmhouse in northern Shaanxi province.

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In rural China, where low incomes and limited social support mean no rest for elders, seniorhood is defined more by resilience than by comfort.

Had she grown up in a big city, she might be retired by now, enjoying a worker’s pension. Instead, she and millions of other older villagers are working hard well into their golden years – out of pride and, increasingly, because they must. 

As China rapidly ages, its countryside is graying faster: Nearly a quarter of rural people are over age 60. But traditional family support is waning and social security is meager. So in Shaanxi and elsewhere, resilient seniors are picking up odd jobs, toiling in fields, and trying new crops and greenhouse farming to make ends meet.

“Elderly will have to rely on themselves until they no longer can,” says sociology professor Yong Cai. “It’s an arrangement of necessity.”

Ren Dezhi peers into his woodpile, looking for the Siberian weasel that a neighbor just spotted slinking toward his henhouse. 

Finding no trace of it, he gathers corn to feed his drove of donkeys – working stock for his small, 2-acre farm – and prepares to herd them into the rugged hills of northern Shaanxi province.

Mr. Ren’s tanned face bears the telltale wrinkles of a life spent farming on the harsh, windswept loess plateau. If he’d grown up in one of China’s big cities, he would be retired by now, enjoying a worker’s pension. Instead, he must eke out a living, raising crops of potatoes, beans, and corn on his scattered, terraced fields.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

In rural China, where low incomes and limited social support mean no rest for elders, seniorhood is defined more by resilience than by comfort.

“Aiyah, this land can’t sustain us reliably,” Mr. Ren, in his late 60s, says with a sigh one recent morning. “If the weather is good, we can get a harvest. If there’s drought, we have nothing. We depend on heaven to eat.”

Across China’s countryside, tens of millions of older villagers like Mr. Ren are working hard well into their golden years – out of pride as well as, increasingly, because they must. As China rapidly ages, rural areas are graying faster: Nearly a quarter of rural people are over age 60. But traditional family support is waning and social security is meager. So in Shaanxi and elsewhere, resilient seniors are picking up odd jobs, toiling in fields, and trying new crops and greenhouse farming to make ends meet.

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