// Global Analysis Archive
Analysts cited by the source assess Myanmar’s post-coup election is unlikely to change the underlying power structure, reduce conflict, or revive the economy. The vote may instead reshape external engagement dynamics, intensifying ASEAN dilemmas and deepening China-linked dependency risks.
China’s birthrate has reportedly dropped to its lowest level since 1949 despite policy shifts and cash incentives aimed at boosting fertility. The trend points to structural deterrents—costs, insecurity, and institutional gaps—likely to constrain growth and intensify aging-related fiscal pressures.
Analysts cited by the source assess Myanmar’s post-coup election is unlikely to change the underlying power structure, reduce conflict, or revive the economy. The vote may instead reshape external engagement dynamics, intensifying ASEAN dilemmas and deepening China-linked dependency risks.
China’s birthrate has reportedly dropped to its lowest level since 1949 despite policy shifts and cash incentives aimed at boosting fertility. The trend points to structural deterrents—costs, insecurity, and institutional gaps—likely to constrain growth and intensify aging-related fiscal pressures.
| ID | Title | Category | Date | Views | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RPT-213 | Myanmar’s Post-Coup Election: Limited Domestic Shift, Rising External Stakes | Myanmar | 2026-01-26 | 1 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-52 | China’s Pro-Natalist Push Hits a Wall as Birthrate Falls to a Post-1949 Low | China | 2026-01-20 | 2 | ACCESS » |