As Japan started witnessing the low birthrate since the beginning of this century, now its neighbour South Korea joined the rank and reported a dip or another fresh low in January, reflecting the dire population crisis in Asia's fourth-largest economy, data showed Wednesday.

Just 23,179 babies were born in January this year, sinking 6 per cent from a year earlier, according to the data from South Korea. It marked the lowest number for any January since the statistics agency started compiling monthly data in 1981, reports Yonhap News Agency.

Child
[Representational image]Creative Commons

The number of babies born in South Korea has been falling on-year for 86 consecutive months. The latest figure is another indicator that more people are delaying or giving up on having babies in the face of an economic slowdown and high home prices.

A total of 249,000 babies were born last year, falling 4.4 per cent from the previous record low in 2021, the agency's data showed earlier.

The country's total fertility rate, the average number of children a woman bears in her lifetime, came to 0.78 in 2022, marking the lowest since 1970, when it was 4.53.

It was much lower than the replacement level of 2.1 that would keep South Korea's population stable at 51.5 million.

SOUTH KOREA
SOUTH KOREA

South Korea continued to report more deaths than births due to its aging population in January.

The number of deaths came to 32,703 for the month, soaring 9.6 per cent from a year earlier to set a fresh high. The country saw its deaths outpace births for the first time in 2020.

The data, however, showed that the number of marriages soared 21.5 percent on-year to 17,926, apparently as couples who have delayed their weddings tied the knot after Covid-19 restrictions were lifted.

Divorces edged down 1.4 per cent on-year to 7,251 in the month.

(With inputs from IANS)