Posted on 03/30/2014 1:21:39 AM PDT by Slings and Arrows
With Denmark's birthrate at a 27-year low, a new ad campaign is asking Danes to get to work. Spies Travel wants Danes to book a romantic city holiday and Do It For Denmark.
There are other ways to get people to make more people. Here are five strategies other countries have employed:
Singapore is aggressively tackling their low birth rate problemwith the help of mints.
On August 9, 2012, the Singapore authorities partnered with mint-peddlers Mentos (The Freshmaker) to put together National Night, a campaign meant to encourage Singaporean couples to let their patriotism explode and help the nation increase its 0.78 children per woman birth rate. The resulting ad went viral. Singapore's population, it needs some increasing/So forget waving flags, August 9th we be freaking I'm a patriotic husband, you're my patriotic wife, let's do our civic duty and manufacture life, the smooth-voiced, minty-breathed rapper suggests. The birth rate aint goin spike itself!
But thats not all. Singapore is also tackling the problem where it lives or rather, where it doesnt: The Urban Redevelopment Authority has placed a limit on the number of small one-bedroom flats that can be built in an effort to curb the singleton lifestyle and encourage people to shack up and make babies.
Singapore spends around $1.3 billion annually on trying to convince its citizens to get busy, including offering $15,000 parental packages for each child, tax incentives, and extended maternity leave
South Koreas birth rate has fallen to one of the lowest in the developed world, at 1.2 children per woman in 2010. Thats even lower than China, with its aggressive one child policy (its at 1.6). The low birth rate is in part the fault of a government program to promote smaller families in the 1970s and 80s, but more recently, financial woes are more to be blamed for the baby slowdownSouth Koreans have one of the highest household debt burdens in Asia, at roughly 160 percent of income.
One of the biggest concerns that South Korean parents have is being able to pay for their childrens care and education, so the government is promising to halve tuition fees for state-run childcare and is actively trying to weaken the perception that a college degree is necessary for success.
Thats one waybut the South Korean government is also taking other, more creative measures. In addition to the cash gifts and incentives offered to staff who have more than one child, in 2010, the South Korean government decided to turn off the lights in its offices at 7pm on the third Wednesday of every monthcalled Family Dayto "help staff get dedicated to childbirth and upbringing." While the official in charge of the program acknowledged that going home early probably didnt have a direct link to making more babies, every little bit helps.
Russias population has been shrinking since the 1990s, propelled by a low birth rate and high death rate (the high alcoholism rate may be a factor in that). So, in 2007, the government declared September 12 national Day of Conception, in the hopes that giving couples the day off from work to do their civic duty would result in a baby spike nine months later, on Russias national day, June 12. Women who gave birth on national day could win refrigerators, money, even cars.
It seems to be workingin 2012, Russias birth rate was set to match and possibly surpass Americas. Thats a big deal to the dying bear: Russia is already one of the most sparsely settled nations in the world, owing to its massive land size; demographics experts claim that if unchecked, the population there could go below 100 million by 2050. In the run-up to his presidential campaign in 2011, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin pledged to spend £33 billion to boost Russias birth rate by 30 percent over the next five years. No word on whether action man Putin was going to see to the duties personally.
In addition to a stagnating economy, Japan is suffering from a seriously low birth rateso low that in 1000 years, one demographer claims, the Japanese will be extinct. The countrys fertility rate fell below two children per woman in 1975 and is now holding steady at around 1.39. But that means that its elderly population is starting to outpace its young population. In 2012, toiletries company Unicharm said that sales of its adult diapers slightly surpassed baby diapers for the first time since the company moved into the elderly market in 1987.
The Japanese government, some critics claim, hasnt done enough to address its low birth rate and in 2010, students at the University of Tsukuba stepped into the breach with Yotaro.
Yotaro is a robot baby. Though he doesnt exactly look like a real baby, he cries, sneezes, suffers that perpetually drippy nose that is instantly recognizable to any parent, giggles when tickled, and is calmed by his rattle. His creators are hoping that if he can spark some measure of parental emotion in the people who see him, maybe theyll consider making a real baby. "A robot can't be human but it's great if this robot triggers human emotions, so humans want to have their own baby," said Hiroki Kunimura, the Yotaro project leader.
In the 1960s, Romania was approaching zero population growtha terrifying prospect for a Communist nation that held the Marxist principle that economic health lay in a robust labor class. So, starting in 1966, the government took some drastic and chilling measures.
They chose the stick rather than the carrot: Though there are tax and monetary incentives to encourage people to have children, they also punished people for not having them: Childless men and women over the age of 25, regardless of marital status, were subject to a new tax that could be as much as 20 percent of their income. Divorce was made incredibly difficult; in 1967, only 28 divorces were allowed, a precipitous decrease from the 26,000 the year before. Police were installed in hospitals to make sure that no illegal abortions were performed, and legal importation of birth control was halted.
It worked, at least in the short term. The baby bounce was significant273,687 in 1966 to 527,764 in 1967but lasted only as long as the police remained in hospitals. In the 1980s, the Nicolae Ceausescu regime again faced a declining birth rate and instituted even more draconian measures to raise it: Women were subjected to monthly gynecological exams to detect pregnancies in their earliest stage and to ensure that the pregnancies came to term. These exams were performed by demographic command units, which would also interrogate childless individuals and couples about their sex lives. Access to abortion was made even more difficult; in 1985, the government declared that in order to eligible for an abortion, regardless of the circumstances, a woman had to have had five children and all those children had to still be under her care, or be over 45. At the same time, the monetary incentives encouraging women to have children were barely enough to buy a bit of milk, under the countrys depressed economic conditions.
Pretty grim. The campaign to forcibly control Romanian womens fertility ended with the overthrow of Ceausescus regime in the bloody revolution of 1989.
Portions of this post appeared in 2012.
lock & load
Russia has a hugely high abortion rate. Apparently they don’t see the contradiction.
multiply and subdue the earth.
Guess what kind of incentives THAT benevolent leader has for the obedient.
Heard it's out of this world
Or that could have the opposite effect. Robobaby is awfully close to uncanny valley territory, that place where things that are not human look too human, making them appear seriously creepy.
Or it could make potential parents realize how much work a baby is, and have them opt for a cat instead.
Paul Ehrlich is deeply saddened. LOL!
“Russias population has been shrinking since the 1990s, propelled by a low birth rate and high death rate (the high alcoholism rate may be a factor in that)...”
Or, you know, the ‘most grisly statistic the world has ever seen,’ a peak of around 280 abortions per 100 live births in the early 90s.
FReegards
Unfortunately, a cat can’t take care of you in your old age. There will be millions of Americans who will have no one to take care of them but the government. Lotsa luck with that ..
Step one, start building a very large bridge in Mexico...
America’s fertility rate was 1.89 as of 2011 which is below the minimum replacement level of 2.1.
The birth rate in North Korea must be astronomical...
Getting people to conceive and deliver these babies is the easy part.
Getting them to raise them is the hard part. What if they really don’t want the babies they have? The children will suffer.
It’s not about getting them pregnant it’s about changing their hearts towards children. That is going to be very hard.
Japan grew from 73 million people in 1940 to 128 million in 2010.
The country is the size of Montana.
Since Japan is so mountainous then the flatter more habitable areas have the people crammed together like sardines in a can.
The ONLY reason for the gooberment to want to keep the birth rate up is to maintain the level of tax slaves.
“Cutting Taxes” — NEVER AN OPTION.
Privyet! I am President Vladimir Putin and I am here to...
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