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The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
  • Carl Haub, Behind the Numbers

    Taiwan’s Birth Rate Lowest Recorded in History

    January 27, 2011 By Wilson Center Staff
    Excerpted from the original article, by Carl Haub, on the Population Reference Bureau’s Behind the Numbers blog:

    Taiwan’s government has just announced that the country’s total fertility rate (or TFR, the average number of children a woman would bear in her lifetime if the birth rate of a particular year were to remain unchanged) in 2010 was the lowest in its history at 0.91 children per woman. It’s the lowest rate any country has ever reported in history. The announcement itself is a bit of a projection since births have been officially reported only through November 2010. The country’s TFR had declined to 1.1 in 2005 and had remained there through 2009.

    The rather spectacular drop in 2010 was due to an additional reason: 2010 is the Year of the Tiger on the Chinese calendar, beginning on February 14. The Tiger year is particularly inauspicious for births since Tigers, while seen as brave, are also seen as headstrong and possibly difficult to work with. It is quite common for employers to consider the zodiac of job applicants and Tigers may be avoided so that parents have some concrete reasons to avoid having a child in Tiger years. While there has been a lot of concern over the demographic situation for some time, Taiwan’s President Ma Ying-jeou has now called for measures to increase the birth rate to be raised to the “national security level.”

    Continue reading on Behind the Numbers.

    Sources: Asia Times, USA Today.

    Photo Credit: Adapted from “070923 sleeping baby,” courtesy of flickr user Wowo and her families.
    Topics: aging, Asia, demography, population, security

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