China's population grew by almost seven million people last year.
China's National Bureau of Statistics said in a report released late last night that the country's population, the world's largest, was 1,314,480,000 at the end of 2006, an increase of 6.92 million people.
The bureau said males accounted for 51.5 per cent of the population, adding that the ratio of males to female newborns stood at 119.25 to 100 in 2006.
The gender imbalance is a growing problem in China, with state media reporting last month that there will be 30 million more men of marriageable age than women in less than 15 years.
China imposed strict population controls, including a policy of one child for almost all couples, in the 1970s to limit growth of its huge population. One side effect has been a jump in gender selection of babies. Traditional preferences for a son mean some women abort their baby if an early term sonogram shows it is a girl.
The sex ratio was 110 boys to 100 girls in 2000. The average for industrialised countries is between 104 and 107 boys for every 100 girls.
China has 20 per cent of the world's population.
The report said that urban residents accounted for 43.9 per cent of the total population by the end of the year, up 0.9 percentage points from 2005.
AP