Key Takeaways:
- China social welfare 2025 shows measurable gains in employment, housing reconstruction and public services driven by central policy and funding.
- Central budget priorities shifted towards education, healthcare and social security, with urban employment rising and large-scale training programmes.
- Targeted support reached disaster-hit and rural communities through reconstruction, subsidies and infrastructure upgrades.
- New childcare places and eldercare initiatives aim to ease family burdens and broaden long-term social support.
Chinese authorities say 2025 has been a year of visible progress on core social welfare priorities, with central leadership emphasising policies intended to raise living standards and expand public services for millions.
China social welfare 2025 progress and measures
President Xi Jinping reiterated that ensuring people enjoy a happy life is a foremost task. Throughout the year, central and local governments pursued a set of practical measures to strengthen education, healthcare, social security, housing and employment, while responding to natural disasters and local hardships.
Officials cite a reorientation of public spending: more than 70 per cent of central fiscal funds went to livelihood sectors. From January to November, public budget outlays on education rose by 4.4 per cent year on year, social security and employment spending grew by 8.1 per cent and health expenditure increased by 4.7 per cent. Those shifts underpinned an array of programmes aimed at improving day-to-day life for households.
Employment remained a central focus. The government positioned steady jobs as a primary target within its macro stabilisation goals, deploying a combination of incentives and training. Subsidy-based training covered over 10 million person-training slots for strategic and urgently needed industries, while urban new jobs reached about 12.1 million in the first eleven months. Fast-growing fields included artificial intelligence and eldercare, where hiring expanded rapidly.
Disaster relief and reconstruction featured prominently. Residents of villages rebuilt after severe floods welcomed central assistance and visits from senior leaders who inspected housing quality and living conditions. In Tibet’s earthquake-affected counties more than 22,000 households moved into new Tibetan-style homes, with roads and solar hot-water systems installed to restore daily life quickly. The central government allocated roughly 1566.8 billion yuan for rescue and support measures targeted at families hit by disaster or illness.
Rural revitalisation and poverty consolidation continued as 2025 marked the final transitional year to fully align poverty-alleviation gains with broader rural development. In 832 previously designated poverty counties, improvements to roads, power and irrigation supported local specialty industries and tourism. Rural employment levels have stabilised above 30 million, contributing to stronger local economies in places such as Guizhou.
Measures to address the needs of children and the elderly advanced across provinces. Authorities reported nearly 2,990 demonstration elder-friendly communities and expanded community-level services, including technology-enabled remote call systems and assistive equipment. Childcare provision rose with more than 890,000 new affordable childcare places and the creation of comprehensive childcare service centres in over 300 prefectures and populous counties. From the autumn term, approximately 12 million families benefited from waived preschool care fees for the final year before kindergarten, easing family costs by an estimated 20 billion yuan.
Officials and analysts say these initiatives aim to make public services more universal and reliable while addressing immediate difficulties households face. As the year closes, central and local authorities emphasise continued follow-through to turn policy commitments into steady improvements in people’s everyday lives.
Image credit: Central Radio and Television Station/CCTV

















