China plans AI usage for elder care as population ages
Move to make services "more convenient, more accessible and more standardised," says civil affairs minister
China said on Sunday it will accelerate the use of artificial intelligence and big data in elderly and social care as it bets on new technologies to drive economic growth despite an ageing population.
The announcement comes as officials grapple with the country's low birth rate and a declining workforce.
"We will accelerate the development and application of new technologies and products such as big data and artificial intelligence in the fields of social assistance, elderly care services, and services for the disabled," civil affairs minister Lu Zhiyuan said at a news conference during China's annual "Two Sessions" political gathering.
The move would make services "more convenient, more accessible and more standardised", Lu said.
China's population fell for the third year in a row in 2024 and it already has more than 310 million people aged 60 and over.
As the workforce shrinks, the government has increasingly looked to technology to drive future economic growth.
Local governments have rushed to implement DeepSeek's AI model into their services since the privately run Chinese company released the latest version of its chatbot in January.
DeepSeek's cut-price model outperformed many of its Western AI competitors despite US curbs on sales of advanced AI chips to Chinese companies.
President Xi Jinping pointed to official support for the sector when he held a rare symposium for private companies last month that included several AI and technology bosses, telling them to "show their talents".
DeepSeek's founder Liang Wenfeng attended, along with representatives from top technology firms such as Tencent, Huawei and Xiaomi.
-
World oceans absorbed record heat in 2025, may trigger intense climate crises, says report
-
February full moon 2026: Snow Moon date, time and visibility
-
Watch: Beautiful northern lights dazzling over Greenland's skies
-
Wildfires are polluting our environment more than we thought: Find out how
-
3I/ATLAS flyby: Why is Jupiter’s 96th Moon drawing intense scientific interest?
-
NASA spacewalk 2026: Medical issue prompts rare talk of early ISS crew return
-
Comet 3I/ATLAS: Scientists examining images they cannot easily explain
-
Wolf Moon 2026: Will the full moon outshine the Quadrantid meteor shower?