Policy Coordination or Fragmentation? A Content Analysis of Digital Aging Policies in China
Sihan Lu, Lili Shang

TL;DR
This paper analyzes how digital aging policies in China are coordinated or fragmented, highlighting challenges and proposing solutions for better governance.
Contribution
The study introduces a policy instrument framework to assess coordination in China's digital aging policies and identifies key challenges.
Findings
Local governments show fragmented policy formation with inconsistent standards and resource allocation.
Three major challenges include data interoperability gaps, uneven funding, and overlapping stakeholder responsibilities.
Proposed solutions include an inter-ministerial coordination framework and digital infrastructure integration.
Abstract
To address population aging, digital technology has become a crucial policy domain for improving aged care services and enhancing the well-being of older adults. The degree of policy coordination would significantly impact the implementation and effectiveness of digital initiatives. By synthesizing key digital aging policy documents from 2020-2024, this study aims to examine the degree of policy coordination, alignment of policy instruments as well as government organization in the Chinese policy landscape. Informed by one policy instrument framework, this study categorizes digital aging policies into supply-side, demand-side and environmental policy instruments. Through iterative coding, this study conducts content and cluster analysis to examine policy content. Findings show that while central government efforts promote coordination, local governments exhibit fragmented policy…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTechnology Use by Older Adults · Social Policies and Healthcare Reform · Aging and Gerontology Research
