East Asia faces population drop 10 years earlier than anticipated


East Asia faces population drop 10 years earlier than anticipated

China, South Korea and Taiwan follow Japan into low birthrate economic woes

March 13, 2021 10:32 JST

TOKYO -- East Asia has entered an era of population decline. Japan was the first to show a clear trend of sustained falls, but now China, South Korea and Taiwan are too.

Last year, South Korea, Taiwan and Hong Kong all posted natural population declines -- meaning there were more deaths than births -- for the first time since comparable data became available. And the number of newborns seems to have declined significantly in mainland China as well.

The region could see a further drop in the number of newborns this year due to the pandemic.

Net population declines have begun 10 years earlier than widely anticipated, hampering long-term growth prospects.

South Korea recorded a natural population decline of 32,700 in 2020, while Taiwan posted a drop of 7,900 and Hong Kong a fall of 6,700.

The number of deaths in South Korea, Taiwan and Hong Kong remained roughly unchanged last year thanks to their stringent coronavirus measures, but the number of newborns fell sharply -- 10%, 7% and 18.5%, respectively.


https%253A%252F%252Fs3-ap-northeast-1.amazonaws.com%252Fpsh-ex-ftnikkei-3937bb4%252Fimages%252F_aliases%252Farticleimage%252F0%252F0%252F2%252F5%252F32865200-1-eng-GB%252F20210309-East-Asia-Population-Table.png



China, which has an estimated population of 1.4 billion, is also edging closer to a natural population decline. According to the country's Ministry of Public Security, the number of newborns fell 15% in 2020 to 10.03 million, almost balanced out by the country's nearly 10 million deaths.

Yet, the figures could be deceiving. The ministry's data is based on registration, and there could be many unfiled births. China's National Bureau of Statistics is expected to release its newborn figure for 2020 as early as April, based on its once-a-decade population census, which was conducted last year.

Given how long pregnancies last, COVID-19 would have had a limited impact on the number of the region's newborns last year. The declining number of marriages had a bigger impact.

In China, South Korea and Taiwan, the number of marriages had been on a steady downtrend before the pandemic. The number of couples getting married in the three economies fell 10% to 30% between 2015 and 2019 due to soaring housing prices and other harsh economic realities that stifle younger generations. In each, the number of marriages fell about 10% last year, a sign that newborn numbers could drop further in 2021.

A falling birthrate seriously impacts a nation's economic performance. In the 1970s, Japan's total fertility rate -- the average number of children a woman will have in her lifetime -- was about 2, so there were enough newborns to keep the overall population afloat. But the rate started to drop markedly in the mid-1980s, when the country's gross domestic product topped $10,000 per capita. A decade later, the rate sank below 1.5.

South Korea's and Taiwan's per capita GDPs crossed $10,000 in the first half of the 1990s, and their fertility rates fell below 1.5 a decade later. China's per capita GDP exceeded $10,000 in 2019, and if the experience of its peers is any guide, its fertility rate will start falling soon.

The only difference between Japan's total fertility rate and those of its East Asian neighbors is the speed of decline. Japan started experiencing a fall in natural population in the 2000s, but its fertility rate has largely held above 1.3.


https%253A%252F%252Fs3-ap-northeast-1.amazonaws.com%252Fpsh-ex-ftnikkei-3937bb4%252Fimages%252F_aliases%252Farticleimage%252F7%252F0%252F5%252F4%252F32864507-1-eng-GB%252F20210309-East-Asia-Population-Line.png



South Korea's fertility rate dipped to 0.98 in 2018 and to 0.84 in 2020, while Taiwan saw its rate fall to around 1. Some experts estimate that China's fertility rate has already dropped to 1.2 or 1.3. A rapid decline in population leads to a "demographic cliff," and those economies would face much steeper cliffs than the one confronting Japan, if the downtrend continues.

The next 10-plus years will be crucial for arresting the rapid birthrate declines.

Until 2000, the number of newborns in China, South Korea and Taiwan remained twice as high as current levels. If people aged 20 or older, who make up a large portion of these populations, have more babies, the population decline could stop. But since baby booms ended after 2000, these nations' birthrates have fallen sharply. In a decade or so, the pool of potential parents will have severely evaporated.

None of East Asia's economies expected their populations to start shrinking so soon. In late 2016, Statistics Korea projected that the country's population would start declining in 2032. In 2019, the United Nations forecast that South Korea's population would start shrinking in 2025 and Taiwan's in 2030.

As for China, the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences expects the country's population to start falling in 2030, with the U.N. saying the decline will begin in 2032. But recent figures indicate the drop could begin much sooner.

...
 

Petr

Administrator

The median age in Thailand currently stands at 40 years and two months, far older than the world average of 30 years and five months. This startling fact suggests that if Thailand fails to take action now, it could rapidly be overwhelmed by problems related to its aging society.
Thailand’s population is on course to shrink by at least 50% by 2100, according to the Social Development and Human Security Ministry.
...
Thailand’s population situation
Thailand’s population stands at 66 million people, but at least 20% of citizens are over 60 and this is expected to grow to 30% by 2036.
This current year also marks the first time when the number of people aged 20 to 24 entering the workforce is lower than the number of people retiring, or those aged 60 to 64.
The birthrate in Thailand has been dropping for several decades. Mahidol University’s Institute for Population and Social Research reports that half a century ago, each woman in Thailand gave birth to an average of just over five children.
However, the average fertility rate has plummeted over the past few decades, dropping to 2.2 births per woman in 1991 and just 1.1 births in 2021. As such, the number of babies born in Thailand has crashed. More than a million babies were born in Thailand every year between 1963 and 1983. But last year, the number was as low as 502,107 babies.
It is notable that 2021 saw the number of deaths overtake births for the first time ever in Thailand.
 

Petr

Administrator

China deletes leaked stats showing plunging birth rate for 2023

Report said China’s population had fallen by 3.1 million this year.
By Gu Ting for RFA Mandarin

2023.12.27​
Chinese censors deleted an article on Wednesday that reportedly leaked full-year population figures for 2023, revealing a plummeting birth rate despite ongoing efforts by the ruling party to encourage people to have families.​
While official figures won't be confirmed until Jan. 17, the Mother and Infant Daily news service said 7.88 million babies were born across China 2023, 1.68 million fewer than in 2022.
Given that 11 million people died this year, China's population has therefore fallen by 3.12 million, the population of a medium-sized Chinese city, the report said, citing the City Data account on Baidu's Tieba forum site.
The City Data post had been deleted by Wednesday evening local time, suggesting that the topic is a highly sensitive one for the ruling Chinese Communist Party, which is keen to sing the praises of the economy in a bid to boost people's confidence in the future.​
However, the reported figures were in line with earlier estimates, including one by Peking University School of Medicine scholar Qiao Jie, who told a forum in August that the number of newborns has plummeted by 40% over the past five years.​
"The number of births in 2023 is expected to range from 7-8 million," Qiao was quoted as saying by the China Business News.​
The journal China Philanthropist predicted in May that new births this year would come in under the 8 million mark, extrapolating figures that were available at the time.​
ENG_CHN_FallingBirths_12272023.2.png
In 2022, China's National Bureau of Statistics reported a drop in population of around 850,000 to 1.41175 billion, the first fall since 1961, the last year of China's Great Famine.​
...​
A Chinese expert who declined to be named for fear of reprisals told Radio Free Asia that the leaked figures likely signal a turning point in the aging of the population, and blamed the three years of stringent zero-COVID policies under Xi.
"The official statistics for negative population growth in 2023 are the direct result of three years of pandemic restrictions and the zero-COVID policy, which dampened people's desire to have children," the expert said.​
"Now, the aging of society is truly accelerating, and birth rates can't keep up with [that].”​
The researcher said people have no energy left after three years of zero-COVID policies.​
"Low fertility ... is also a political choice," they said. "Young people in China over the past year have generally chosen not to marry, and have little desire to reproduce."​
"They're not buying homes, making step-by-step career moves or growing the population as their parents or the government would like," the expert said. "The model of accumulating wealth and then having kids is broken."
"Young people are starting to make their own choices."​
 
I wonder how much Han emigration affects the percentages. I hear Canada is acquiring large numbers, as all
formerly Western countries are. I wonder if it amounts to a percent.
 

Macrobius

Megaphoron
Do America next.

We were slated to have a white resurgence in the 2030s (last on the planet) but the Millennials are ... struggling... with this demographic task.

China's one child policy and our echo-echo boom were supposed to settle the matter. Instead, we got Netherlandish BOOM:

(English version of Hermans Moonspeak)... flying to South Africa



Deadlier than the Male... https://www.poetry.com/poem/33429/the-female-of-the-species

Meanwhile... for the Males... about those graves on the High Fell...



'We have been BLIND... Commander of Legions... The Enemy is preparing for WAR'

'The World [Kosmos] is in Grave Danger'
 
Last edited:

Petr

Administrator

North Korea's fertility rate reaches all-time low of 1.38, study suggests
Posted : 2023-12-30 09:00​
North Korea’s fertility rate ― the average number of children a woman bears in her lifetime ― may have already fallen below 1.5, a recent study suggests.​
According to a report released on Thursday by the North Korea research center at the Bank of Korea, the North’s fertility rate was estimated to have reached an all-time low of 1.38 in the 2010-19 period, a significant drop from 2.69 in the 1980-89 period.
That number is far lower than the estimate of the United Nations Population Fund ― 1.8 in 2023.
The reason for the gap may lie in the U.N. agency’s reliance on raw data provided by North Korean authorities, which is highly unreliable, the researchers said.
Instead of making their assessment based on anything given by the regime, the researchers conducted a survey on 95 North Korean escapees. Given that they may not give the accurate number of their own babies, the scholars studied the family trees of their relatives as well as acquaintances ― a total of 1,137 ― based on interviews.​
With that method, the researchers concluded that North Korea’s fertility rate has decreased at a much faster pace than estimated by the U.N. The figure fell below 2 to 1.91 in the 1990s and slipped further to 1.59 in the 2000s before hitting 1.38 in the 2010s, the study shows.​
They said the number is consistent with witness accounts that having just one child has increasingly become the norm among women born in the 70s and 80s after experiencing a devastating famine from 1994 to 1998 in North Korea.​
 
I understand that Southern and Midwestern Whites keep their numbers up fairly well. This would be of course 100% Christian influenced. This is not to say they keep abreast of the brown flood because such would not be possible
 

Macrobius

Megaphoron
I understand that Southern and Midwestern Whites keep their numbers up fairly well. This would be of course 100% Christian influenced. This is not to say they keep abreast of the brown flood because such would not be possible
Nothing biologically is happening here you can't see in a petri dish
 
Top