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Alarm over S. Korea's low birth rate
Straits Times ^
| By Caroline Gluck
Posted on 05/10/2003 6:17:43 PM PDT by DeaconBenjamin
Many rural communities are in danger of dying out, and the problem could threaten the nation's economic growth
SEOUL - Just one school remains open in the village of Dongmyun, deep in the heart of South Korea's countryside in central Chungcheong province.
There used to be four schools in the area. But in the past 30 years, the number of pupils has fallen dramatically from more than 1,000 to just over 100.
Village head Hong Ui Jeong fears that without drastic action, communities like his may die out totally.
With fewer than 20 babies born last year, he is doing what little he can to try to reverse the trend.
To couples who give birth this year, he will offer a cash incentive - money that comes out of his own salary.
'The population in Dongmyun is dropping by about 100 people every year,' he said. 'To stop our village dying, I decided to offer 100,000 won (S$145) to every couple if they had a baby.'
One mother who has benefited from that offer is Ms Kim Sun Deok, nursing her two-month-old son, Song Do.
'I think it's better than nothing, but it's not enough to help bring up a child,' she said. 'Anyway, many of my friends tend to marry later in life, and by then it's too late to start a family.'
Other regions with dwindling populations are also taking steps such as offering couples a silver bracelet for their newborn - to show how highly valued they are.
Meanwhile, government officials are getting worried over the declining birth rate.
Rural communities like Dongmyun are the worst hit. About half of the village population is over the age of 65, and only 10 per cent of women are of child-bearing age.
Younger couples are also moving out of the countryside to cities in search of better jobs and a better lifestyle.
The falling birth rate is evident across the country. More working couples are put off by the high costs of raising children and the lack of adequate childcare and social welfare facilities.
Mr Shim Jae Kwon of the ruling Millennium Democratic Party said that, in the past, South Korea focused on achieving rapid economic development - and welfare issues were not a top priority.
He admitted that unless rapid steps were taken, the country could begin to suffer economically and face serious manpower shortages.
A shrinking workforce will have to support a growing elderly population. And the country could lose its economic edge.
After decades of actively promoting birth control - which was implemented until 1996 - population advisers are now considering what was once unthinkable: introducing new policies to promote child birth.
Said Mr Kim Seung Kwon of the Korea Institute for Health and Social Affairs: 'The most important thing is that the government needs to share the economic burden by providing more family allowances and tax breaks.'
Other ideas include longer maternity leave and more public child-care facilities.
But unless such measures are implemented soon, many dwindling rural communities such as Dongmyun may not survive.
BABIES: Stork's not coming
FIGURES about to be released suggest that South Korea may have the lowest birth rate in the world at 1.17 - below the 2.1 rate needed to keep the population at its current size.
This will be a historic low for the country and is part of a downward trend since the 1970s, when the birth rate was more than 4.
The figure was 1.3 in 2001 and 1.47 in 2000.
TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Government
KEYWORDS: geography; korea
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To: Torie
"The place with the lowest fertility is not a country, but has certain autonomous features." Could it be Gitmo?---Guantanamo Bay, in Liberated Cuba?
To: cookcounty
LOL. I think the place has a shortage of woman. But then again, perhaps they are all continuously pregnant as a result. Gitmo is not autonomous at all actually. Guam is actually, as is Puerto Rico, and listed, but neither are the place.
42
posted on
05/10/2003 8:10:32 PM PDT
by
Torie
To: Torie
The Holy See almost certainly has the lowest birthrate of any independent nation. And we'd hope so, too, since it has virtually no lay citizens.
43
posted on
05/10/2003 8:12:57 PM PDT
by
Loyalist
(Can you hear me now, Adrienne?)
To: Torie
...lowest fertility rate.... ...Oh, I'll bet it's the Greek Island of Lesbos. They're pretty autonomous, right?
To: Loyalist
Ya, but it isn't on the UN list. I think its population is around 300 or something.
45
posted on
05/10/2003 8:13:47 PM PDT
by
Torie
To: cookcounty
No comment. :)
46
posted on
05/10/2003 8:14:15 PM PDT
by
Torie
To: Torie
How about the monasteries on Mount Athos in Greece, where women are forbidden from even entering?
47
posted on
05/10/2003 8:14:57 PM PDT
by
Loyalist
(Can you hear me now, Adrienne?)
To: cookcounty
By the way, it isn't Fire Island in NY either.
48
posted on
05/10/2003 8:15:02 PM PDT
by
Torie
To: Torie
...Macau?
To: Torie
You have found the answer, it is incredibly expensive to raise children in the ROK. It is not unusual for parents to budget 40 or 50% of their take home pay for their children's education, the largest part of this going to hogwans (private institutions) or tutors that prepare their children for the multitude of placement tests that determine a students educational future.
Families are also having children later in life than they were before, so naturally they have less time for children.
There is also a strong preference for sons, (the reasons or many and cultural and I don't want to get side tracked) so many families will only have one child if their first child is a son. Many parents who have a daughter will have another child late in life in an effort to have a son.
The divorce rate is rising so many mothers who would have tried for the second child later in life do not because they are now single.
The exodus from the country side in driven by women and children. On average women much prefer city life to farm life, in fact many farmers are marrying Philippino or Chinese women and bringing them to Korea, because they cannot find Korean women who want to live in rural areas. If you want your child to have a chance to get into the best universities, Seoul National, Yonsei, Ewha etc they need access to the best institutes and private tutors these, of course, are found in the big cities.
These are the largest reasons for Koreas declining birth rate and the move from rural to urban areas.
50
posted on
05/10/2003 8:20:07 PM PDT
by
Cdnexpat
To: cookcounty
Oh, warm. Very warm.
51
posted on
05/10/2003 8:20:13 PM PDT
by
Torie
To: Torie
"...... I think its population is around 300 or something...... So basically, it's a place where nobody gives birth.....Hmmm.
To: firebrand; rmlew; Cacique; Dutchy; StarFan; nutmeg; RaceBannon; Coleus; hot august night
ping.
To: Torie
Quemoy? or Matsu? Inhabited only by Taiwanese soldiers.
To: cookcounty
They are as much a part of Taiwan as Santa Catalina is to the US.
55
posted on
05/10/2003 8:23:54 PM PDT
by
Torie
To: Torie
I know...it's the Spratleys. Sailors, but no bars.
To: cookcounty
Nope, and it ain't Midway Island either.
57
posted on
05/10/2003 8:24:54 PM PDT
by
Torie
To: cookcounty
You haven't even tried to name the real countries with the lowest fertility rates either, nor the grouping of countries with something in common with the lowest fertility rates on this globe overall. Don't you want to play?
58
posted on
05/10/2003 8:27:20 PM PDT
by
Torie
To: Torie
My last shot---Diego Garcia.
To: cookcounty
Sad, and you were so close with Macao, which is actually on the list, and a real contender.
60
posted on
05/10/2003 8:27:59 PM PDT
by
Torie
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