Taiwan's birth rate hit a record low in 2010, the government said Sunday, as President Ma Ying-jeou ordered national security-level counter-measures to address the issue.
![Birth Rate in Taiwan Hits Record Low
Birth Rate in Taiwan Hits Record Low](https://www.medindia.net/afp/images/Taiwan-population-demographics-216104.jpg)
The number of newly born babies also struck a record low of 166,886 last year, down from 191,310 of 2009, it said.
Interior ministry officials said some parents were anxious to avoid having children in 2010, which in Chinese tradition was the Year of the Tiger, deemed one of the fiercest astrological signs.
Meanwhile, the number of people aged 65 and over accounted for 10.74 percent of the island's more than 23 million population, above the 7.0 percent level at which a society is defined as "ageing" by the World Health Organisation, the ministry said.
The new numbers alarmed Ma when he was given a preview of them by Interior Minister Chiang Yi-hua earlier this week, local media reported.
"President Ma said the government must not sit idle and demanded that 'national security-level' measures be taken," the minister said.
Advertisement
The Council for Economic Planning and Development, Taiwan's top economic planning body, is proposing an annual budget of Tw$38 billion ($1.3 billion) for birth incentives and childcare support from 2012, local media said.
Advertisement
The government hopes to encourage the public to have more children during the Year of the Dragon in 2012, which is considered the most auspicious year in the Chinese zodiac and a favorite birth sign for children, the media said.
Source-AFP