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South Korea's fertility rate ― the average number of children a woman is expected to give birth to in her lifetime ― came to 0.81 in 2021. This is the lowest figure since the country's statistics agency began compiling related data in 1970. gettyimagesbank |
Similar culture attributed to falling birth rate
By Kim Bo-eun, Luna Sun
HONG KONG, BEIJING ― Japan has long been suffering from the worst population crisis, but South Korea's fertility rate is now one of the lowest in the world, and China's is not much better.
Last year, in a nation of over 51 million people, the average number of children a woman in South Korea was expected to give birth to in her lifetime sat at 0.81 ― the lowest since Statistics Korea began compiling related data in 1970 when the figure stood at 4.53 and down from over 2 in 1983.
According to an estimate from a team of demographers, including Liang Jianzhang, Ren Zeping and He Yafu, as China did not release an official figure last year, for China's population of 1.4126 billion, the fertility rate in 2021 was 1.15, down from an official figure of 1.3 a year earlier.
Economies faced with an ageing population are paying close attention to fertility rates as they reflect a trend that enables governments to make projections for longer-term changes in population.
Lower fertility rates are expected in developed countries due to things like wealth, education and urbanization, while the figure in undeveloped countries tends to be higher as families seek labor to earn money and care of their parents in old age.
In stark contrast to South Korea and China, the landlocked country of Niger in North Africa ― which is one of the least developed countries in the world ― had one of the highest fertility rates last year with an average of close to 7.
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Less births accelerating population aging in Korea
"My husband says having children will limit life choices. For me, there are a number of factors, such as uncertainty about whether my child will have a happy future considering the deteriorating natural and social environment, but also because it will be difficult to continue working with a child," said married 34-year-old South Korean interior designer Han Jia.
"Korea has improved its childcare leave system, and men are becoming more involved in the household, but there is still a long way to go."
South Korea's rapidly aging population, driven by an increasing reluctance to have children as well as longer life expectancy, is putting the country's economy in peril.
South Korea became an aged society in 2017, with more than 14 percent of the population 65 and older, having become an ageing society in 1999, when more than 7 per cent of the population fell within the bracket.
The figure is projected to reach 37 percent in 2045, which will make South Korea one of the oldest populations in the world.
Life expectancy at birth in South Korea also stood at 83.5 years in 2020, before the population started contracting for the first time the following year amid a falling birth rate.
This poses structural problems for the economy, as a smaller, aged population indicates a shrinking labor force and faltering domestic demand.
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Children play at a kindergarten in Yantai, Shandong Province in China on May 31, 2021. AFP-Yonhap |
Neighboring countries in similar situation
In Japan, concerns over its fertility rate started in the late 1980s. It eventually hit a low of 1.26 in 2005, and after marginally recovering to 1.45 in 2015, has slid for the last six years to 1.3 last year.
There were 811,604 births in Japan last year, the fewest since record keeping began in 1899, while deaths climbed to 1,439,809, leading to an overall population drop of 628,205 to 125 million.
China is now facing the same problem after the world's most populous country's birth rate dropped for a fifth consecutive year to a record low of 7.52 births for every 1,000 people in 2021, from 8.52 in 2020.
With one of the fastest ageing populations in the world, the productivity from China's vast labor force is also projected to fall.
"Children are not a must-have in my life and I don't have the confidence yet. Because raising children is a complicated challenge ― economically speaking, it's a very costly process," said Felizia Yao, a 27-year-old single woman based in Shanghai.
"With my current financial situation, the burden of raising a child will mean sacrificing my own quality of life. So currently, I don't have a reason to have a child."
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The view of Seoul from N Seoul Tower in the center of the city. High housing costs are among the factors for why young people are increasingly opting against getting married and having children in Korea. Newsis |
Similarities in culture, society driving lower fertility rates
According to independent Chinese demographer He, women in East Asia may be less willing to have children because they are expected to be the main carer, which subjects them to disadvantages with regards to their careers.
"In East Asian culture, childbirth means more dedication and sacrifice from women, while men are less involved in childcare," He said.
"Married women who have children are vulnerable to discrimination in the job market. Many women are forced to choose to have fewer or no children in order to achieve career advancement."
Women in the region are "now more aware of gender inequalities," said Korea Institute for Health and Social Affairs research fellow Lee Sang-lim, with a social system that lags in facilitating childcare meaning that women are increasingly opting not to get married and give birth.
"It is difficult to even maintain my career with one child," said 39-year-old medical professional Kim, who only wished to be identified by her surname. She is already raising a three-year-old daughter in South Korea's capital of Seoul.
"Women are expected to play a key role in children's upbringing, but where I work, women are also expected to deliver the same performance workwise."
The high costs of raising children in China and South Korea, where middle-class parents will often pay for their children to receive private education, is another common feature that is prompting people in the region to reconsider giving birth.
Lee Joo-yeon, 34, has been unable to return to a full-time office job after giving birth to her now four-year-old son and she finds herself working part-time at a shop in Pyeongtaek in Gyeonggi province.
"I did not entirely rule out having a second child, but after I took on a part-time job, I realized that it has become even more difficult to have another child, because I am tired after coming home from work but still need to take care of my son," said Lee Joo-yeon, who initially stopped working after she got married as she moved to a different city.
Yuan Xin, vice-president of the China Population Association and a demography professor at Nankai University in Tianjin, said Confucian culture is behind the low fertility phenomenon of the region.
"Countries in the East Asian cultural sphere are known for sparing no effort for their children's education," he said, referring to the ancient Chinese belief system.
"The cost of raising a child, whether it's a direct cost or an indirect cost, is very high compared to developed countries in the West, especially the indirect cost ― which is the cost of time and care other than money, such as the time parents and families spend on cultivating the children, including tutoring."
South Korea and China also face similar fundamental problems that are deterring people from having children ― a tough job market and expensive housing costs.
"The shortage of stable jobs and subsequent difficulty young people face in the job market, high housing prices and expensive private education costs are behind the phenomenon," research fellow Lee Sang-lim added.
Demographer He pointed out that the social stigma that conservative societies in East Asia impose on "unmarried mothers and illegitimate children" has resulted in a comparatively low proportion of children born out of wedlock.
He noted that in some developed countries in Europe, as well as the United States, the traditional model of marriage and childbirth is no longer the absolute mainstream.
"There are many economically independent women in these countries who do not want to be bound by marriage, but want to have their own children," he added.
"In recent years, the proportion of children born out of wedlock in France and the Nordic countries has exceeded half of all births."
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A person walks by a wedding dress shop in northwestern Seoul, taken March 18, 2022. Newsis |
Falling number of marriages contributing to falling births
South Korea's falling number of marriages is also contributing to the declining birth rate, with the figure having continued to fall over the past decade with only 192,500 taking place last year compared to 327,100 in 2012.
Last year, South Korea saw a 4.3 percent drop in births from the previous year ― with mothers giving birth to just 260,500 babies, with a birth rate of 7.036.
This added up to a population decline from 51.84 million in 2020 to 51.75 million ― a decrease of 0.18 percent.
In China last year, around 7.63 million marriages were registered, the lowest total since records began in 1986, according to the Ministry of Civil Affairs.
"Having children will seriously limit my own future potential," said Spike Jin, a 24-year-old Chinese man working in the blockchain industry.
"The financial burden [of having children] is part of the limitation, of course. Having more money means I have more options, namely more potential. Once you have a child, it would be much harder to refuse societal norms imposed on you. When you're alone, you could justly do whatever you want without burdens."
A growing portion of younger people also now value personal achievement and freedom over the traditional path of getting married and having children.
"I need time for myself to achieve my goals and fulfil myself first before raising a kid," said Reona Ding, a 33-year-old married woman in China.
The reluctance of its younger generation to have children will prove to be a core challenge for China after its natural population growth rate fell to 0.034 per cent last year, which was the lowest since the Great Chinese Famine from 1959-61.
Last year, China saw an 11.5 percent drop in births ― with mothers giving birth to just 10.62 million babies, contributing to an overall population increase of just 480,000.
"A higher income may lead to a shift to spending more on self-development and pleasure, from spending on family and children," the China Population Association's Yuan added.
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People are seen in a busy district in downtown Shanghai on May 10, 2021. Reuters-Yonhap |
Comprehensive approach needed to tackle challenge
South Korea is the only country with a fertility rate of below 1 percent among the 38 member states of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, which includes Japan and South Korea but not China.
The total fertility rate for the first quarter of 2022 rose to 0.86, but was still the lowest first quarter figure on record.
It had begun devising policies decades earlier to tackle the demographic changes, with attention focused on facilitating and expanding parental childcare leave, increasing day care centers and childcare services and providing allowances for child birth and childcare.
But these have evidently proven to be ineffective, given they do not accompany effectively addressing more fundamental problems such as the tough job market, skyrocketing housing prices and high costs of raising children.
"The policies have not offered support to the extent that these cancel the effects of the increasing burden of housing or private education costs," Lee Sang-lim said.
"The government has dealt with the low fertility rate as a separate issue, instead of addressing it with an integrated policy approach. There needs to be efforts to tackle the issue with a macro-perspective."
China has also been taking measures to tackle its declining birth rate, and last year, it allowed families to have a third child, five years after upgrading its one-child policy.
Central and local governments in China have also been stepping up efforts to encourage the young generation to have children by expanding paternity leave and introducing tax benefits.
But experts agree that the measures need to go beyond monetary incentives to address fundamental reasons that hinder child birth.
"To increase the fertility rate, it is necessary to eliminate gender discrimination in the job market and ensure women's right to fair employment," demographer He said.
"The second is to appropriately shorten working hours. Working hours in East Asian countries are too long. The long working hours have affected the people's willingness to have children in these countries to a certain extent."