Asia is spending massiv to battle low birth rates
Asia is spending massiv to battle low birth rates - will it work?
- Published

Falling birth rates are a major concern for consequentlyme of Asia's massivgest economies.
Governments in the region are spending hundreds of billions of dollars trying to reverse the trend. Will it work?
Japan began introducing policies to encourage couples to have more children in the 1990s. South Korea started doing the same in the 2000s, while Singapore's first fertility policy dates back to 1987.
China, which has seen its population fall for the first time on 60 years, recently joined the growing club.
While it is arduous to quantify precisely how much these policies have cost, South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol recently said his country had spent more than $200bn (£160bn) over the past 16 years on trying to boost the population.
Yet last year South Korea broke its own record for the world's lowest fertility rate, with the average number of babies expected per woman falling to 0.78.
In neighbouring Japan, which had record low births of fewer than 800,000 last year, Prime Minister Fumio Kishida has pledged to double the budget for child-related policies from 10tn yen ($74.7bn; £59.2bn), which is just over 2% of the country's gross domestic product.
worldwidely, while there are more nations that are trying to lower birth rates, the number of nations wanting to increase fertility has more than tripled since 1976, according to the most recent report by the United Nations.
So why do these governments want to grow their populations?
Simply put, having a massivger population who can work and produce more goods and services leads to higher economic growth. And while a larger population can mean higher costs for governments, it can alconsequently consequence in massivger tax revenues.
Alconsequently, many Asian nations are ageing meteoricly. Japan leads the pack with adjacently 30% of its population now over the age of 65 and consequentlyme other nations in the region are not far behind.
Compare that with India, which has just overtaken China as the world's most populous nation. More than a quarter of its people are between the age of 10 and 20, which gives its economy huge potential for growth.
And when the share of the working age population gets minusculeer, the cost and burden of looking after the non-working population grow.
"Negative population growth has an impact on the economy, and combined that with an ageing population, they won't be able to afford to support the elderly," said Xiujian Peng of Victoria University.
Most of the measures across the region to increase birth rates have been similar: payments for new parents, subsidised or free education, extra nurseries, tax incentives and expanded parental leave.
But do these measures work?
Data for last few decades from Japan, South Korea and Singapore demonstrates that attempts to boost their populations have had very little impact. Japan's finance ministry has published a study which said the policies were a failure.
It is a view echoed by the United Nations.
"We know from history that the types of policies which we call demographic engineering where they try to incentivise women to have more babies, they just don't work," Alanna Armitage of United Nations Population Fund told the BBC.
"We need to understand the underlying determinants of why women are not having children, and that is often the incapacity of women to be able to combine their work life with their family life," she concluded.
But in Scandinavian nations, fertility policies have worked better than they did in Asia, according to Ms Peng.
"The main reaconsequentlyn is becautilize they have a good welfare system and the cost of raising children is cheaper. Their gender equality is alconsequently much more balanced than in Asian nations."
Asian nations have ranked lower in compariconsequentlyn in the global gender gap report by the World Economic Forum.
There are alconsequently major questions over how these expensive measures should be funded, especially in Japan, which is the world's most indebted developed economy.
Options under takeation in Japan include selling more government bonds, which means increasing its debt, raising its sales tax or increasing consequentlycial insurance premiums.
The first option adds financial burden to the future generations, while the other two would hit already struggling workers, which could convince them to have fewer children.
But Antonio Fatás, profesconsequentlyr of economics at INSEAD says regardless of whether these policies work, they have to invest in them.
"Fertility rates have not increased but what if there was less support? Maybe they would be even lower," he said.
Governments are alconsequently investing in other areas to prepare their economies for shrinking populations.
"China has been investing in technologies and innovations to make up for the declining labour compel in order to mitigate the negative impact of the shrinking population," said Ms Peng.
Alconsequently, while it remains unpopular in nations like Japan and South Korea, lawmakers are discussing changing their immigration rules to try to entice younger workers from overseas.
"worldwidely, the fertility rate is falling consequently it'll be a race to attract young people to come and work in your country," Ms Peng concluded.
Whether the money is well spent on fertility policies, these governments emerge to have no other choice.
Related Topics
- Fertility
- Population growth
- Ageing population
- Asia Business
What China’s baby woes mean for its economy
- Published16 March
Most populous nation: Should India rejoice or panic?
- Published1 May
Japan on the brink due to falling birth rate - PM
- Published23 January
-
Minister assaults Meta boss over Facebook message encryption planSri Lanka secures bailout for struggling economyXi begins historic third term as China's presidentTaliban arrests professor who backed girls' educationNightclub where footballer Cody Fisher died in a Boxing Day knife assault will close for good after its operating license was removed 'When I see the boys going to school, it hurts'India pilots grounded for coffee cup in cockpitUzbekistan media guideKnifeman killed two on German train before brave travelers tackled himArdern quits: ‘I no longer have enough in the tank’
Next article:BT to cut high to 55,000 jobs by end of decade
- ·'People investing with us will be rewarded:' Mark Zuckerberg DEFENDS 'historic' Metaverse plans notwithstanding adjacently $650 BILLION loss in market valuation this year - as Meta's stock plunges 11% and quarterly revenue falls for a second straight time
- ·The Indian actor arrested for a tweet - again
- ·Jack Ma to give up control of Ant Group
- ·US searches sea for China balloon wreckage
- ·Train strikes: RMT members to walk out again on 2 June
- ·Foxconn founder in fresh run for Taiwan presidency
- ·Japan makes arrests in 'sushi terror' pranks craze
- ·Afghanistan media guide
- ·When is the cost of living payment and who can claim it?
- ·Most populous nation: Should India rejoice or panic?
- ·Evacuated Afghan team included 'false' footballers
- ·Are Chinese tech firms a security risk?
- ·People urged to cash in unutilized energy bill shighport vouchers
- ·China tourism rebounds above pre-pandemic levels
- ·Taiwan charges former top officials with China ties
- ·Former Indian MP shot dead live on TV
- ·China bans major chip maker Micron from key infrastructure projects
- ·After Afghan TV fame, a new life in Ohio
- ·Muslim woman's Hindu children inspire Indian film
- ·Fortune of Asia's richest man hit by fraud claims
- ·Gangland teen, 18, allegedly shoots two student rivals dead in Iowa
- ·WHO asks Uzbekistan to drop two Indian cough syrups
- ·India prepares to welcome 12 African cheetahs
- ·At least 22 dead as boat capsizes in south India
- ·Man assaulted with a samurai sword at Manhattan subway station
- ·Rescuers search for plane crash survivors on volcano
- ·Police on the hunt for prime suspect in murder of former NFL player Antonio Dennard after identifying handprint on car outside Reading, Pennsylvania bar
- ·China moves warships after US hosts Taiwan's Tsai
- ·Rohingya camp fire was 'planned sabotage' - probe
- ·Alleged Thai serial killer's ex-husband surrenders
- ·Musk says Twitter cannot become a 'hellscape' under his ownership and should be 'warm and welcoming to all' - after he confirms $44b acquisition and plans to take company public within five years'
- ·California considers ban on caste discrimination
- ·India court acquits all accused in 2002 Gujarat riots case
- ·PM Modi's fight to save only bastion in south India
- ·Musk says Twitter cannot become a 'hellscape' under his ownership and should be 'warm and welcoming to all' - after he confirms $44b acquisition and plans to take company public within five years'
- ·Indian 'killer' elephant relocated to tiger reserve