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Edmund Scanlan
Edmund Scanlan
Pro-Natalist countries encourage people to have children. Usually, these are countries that are in stage five of the DTM. Because of a low or negative natural increase rate, the population is decreasing.
In Japan, they have invested millions of dollars to promote couples having children. In Denmark, there is a popular television campaign called ‘Do It for Denmark’.
Singapore has a ‘National Night’, where one day out of the month couples are encouraged to engage in an activity that could result in a child nine months later. In Sweden, women and men are given over 400 days of paid maternity leave. However, sometimes that can backfire as employers are wary of hiring someone who is newly married.
Pro-natalist policies can be controversial because it's not certain how effective they are. Cultural and social norms, as well as access to education and reproductive health services, play the largest role in fertility rates and how many children are born.
People that had more than one child could be fined and/or demoted. They also would pay people if they got sterilized. The policy worked in that it lowered the natural increase rate.
However, people strongly preferred male children and so many female fetuses were aborted, sometimes even abandoned. Today that has led to millions more men than women in their childbearing years. The policy was relaxed in 2015, but now China is having a problem with too low of a NIR because of the imbalance between men and women.
In the 1960s and 1970s, India attempted to lower its NIR by imposing forced sterilizations. However, the policy was met with a huge backlash as people protested vehemently. Because of this, the sterilizations were made voluntary and the plan did not work. Therefore India’s population continues to rise and demographers believe within the next ten years India will surpass China as the world’s most populous nation.
Immigration policies can also affect a country’s NIR. Some countries, like Germany, have taken in many refugees during the latter part of the 20th century and even today.
By international law countries are supposed to take in any refugee, a person forced to leave their country because of persecution. While immigrants are typically leaving their country looking for better opportunities in a new place.
🎥 Watch: AP HUG - Population Policies
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