What's new

Birth rates drop, families shrink in aging Turkey: Statistics

dani191

SENIOR MEMBER
Joined
Jul 10, 2017
Messages
4,781
Reaction score
-9
Country
Israel
Location
Israel

Birth rates drop, families shrink in aging Turkey: Statistics​

BY DAILY SABAH​

ISTANBUL MAY 12, 2022 - 11:15 AM GMT+3

A baby holds her father's hand at a newborn unit of a hospital, in Trabzon, northern Turkey, May 4, 2022. (AA PHOTO)
A baby holds her father's hand at a newborn unit of a hospital, in Trabzon, northern Turkey, May 4, 2022. (AA PHOTO)


Still younger than other countries, Turkey faces the hard fact of aging as latest statistics show fertility rates decreased while average household size dropped to around three from four​

RECOMMENDED
Students from Pakistan-Turkey Maarif International Schools and Colleges attend the International Science and Engineering Fair (Regeneron ISEF), Atlanta, U.S., May 13, 2022. (Courtesy of Pakistan-Turkey Maarif International)

Pakistani-Turkish Maarif school students become world champion at science competition

MAARIF-FOUNDATION
The latest statistics published by the Turkish Statistical Institute (TurkStat) on Thursday justify President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s famous advice to newlywed couples: Have at least three children.
Figures regarding family size and birth rate indicate the worrying aging trend of the population, which still boasts a high rank in the list of countries with a young population. The 2021 statistics of TurkStat showed the number of live births in the country was 1.07 million, while the total fertility rate was 1.70 children. Fertility rate refers to the average number of live births that a woman would have in her reproductive life (usually between the ages of 15 and 49). This rate was 2.38 children in 2001. TurkStat says the fertility rate remained below the population’s replacement level of 2.10. Replacement level means the fertility rate to sustain the average size of the population in any given country.
The highest fertility rate was once again in the southeastern province of Şanlıurfa, with 3.81 children. Şanlıurfa, along with other southeastern provinces, usually scores high in this category as home to traditionally large families. Indeed, Şırnak and Mardin, other southeastern provinces, followed it with high fertility rates, at 3.18 and 2.78, respectively.
The lowest fertility rate was in the western province of Kütahya at 1.21 children, ahead of Bartın and Zonguldak in northern Turkey. Still, Kütahya was only slightly behind 1.50 children, the average total fertility rate in European Union member countries in 2020, according to TurkStat. In EU countries, France has the highest fertility rate with 1.83 children, while Turkey ranked third in 2020, the latest year with available statistics.
Another damning figure was in crude birth rate, or the number of live births per every 1,000 people. This figure decreased to 12.8 per 1,000 in 2021, from 20.3 in 2001. Şanlıurfa topped the list of provinces with the highest crude birth rate, while Zonguldak scored the lowest rate.

The highest fertility rate was in the age group between 25 and 29, the statistics showed that the adolescent fertility rate (between the ages of 15 and 19) decreased.
Figures also show a change in the "birth age." While the mean age of mothers giving birth was around 26 in 2001, it increased to 29 in 2021. Istanbul had the highest mean age, at 28, while Ağrı had the lowest age at around 23.
Only 3.1% of births in 2021 were multiple births, twins, triplets, or more, in other words.
Alarm bells are already ringing for Turkey, which faces the aging phenomenon in population that plagues other countries. In the past five years, the country's elderly population has increased by 24%, with people aged 65 and above constituting 9.7% of the total population in 2021. Though advances in public health, with reforms in health care services, prolong the average lifetime of the population, it is a concerning situation when coupled with a lower fertility rate.
On family, TurkStat says the average household size decreased to 3.23 people last year, from 4 people in 2008. The southeastern province of Şırnak had the highest average household size with 5.45 people, ahead of Şanlıurfa and Hakkari, while the smallest household size was in the western province of Çanakkale with 2.57 people, ahead of Tunceli and Giresun.
TurkStat figures on families also indicate a rise in the number of one-person households. The rate of people living alone rose to 18.9%, from 13.9% in 2014. Both one-family households and households with extended family, also decreased. The highest proportion of one-person households was in the province of Tunceli, ahead of Gümüşhane and Giresun, while Diyarbakır and Batman in eastern Turkey scored lowest in this category. Single parent households constituted 10.1% of total households in the country in 2021, while women made up the majority of single parents living with at least one child. Bingöl in the east had the highest single-parent rate at 12.5%, along with Adana and Elazığ provinces, while this rate was lowest in Tokat and Ardahan provinces.
As for extended family households, Hakkari scored highest while it was lowest in the central province of Eskişehir.
The statistics also delved into consanguine marriages and indicated that they made up 8.3% of total marriages. The majority were between first cousins, while Mardin in the southeast had the highest number of people married to their relatives, at 20.5%, TurkStat says, ahead of other southeastern provinces Şanlıurfa and Diyarbakır.
 
.
1.70 children is shockingly low for a nation that still needs to develop.
 
. . . .
turkey is big country
It's not about the geographical size of a country. The available resources for the population in their day to day life is what really matters. Egypt, Pakistan, India, Bangladesh, Nigeria etc. are pretty much victims of their own population growth.

In fact, even in Turkey things like infrastructure, education levels, general income had started to decline after our population boomed in the sixties.
 
.
I thought so too but the truth is that overpopulation is 10 times worse than having a low birth rate.

Bro you guys need to keep the economic activity going. Population coffins literally destroy future growth. How will you keep an ever increasing elderly population afloat?
 
. .
The data is proving one very important change which makes me extraordinarily happy:

The Turkish youth denies marrying a blood relative.

While in 2010 almost 6% of all legally registered marriages took place between two relatives; in 2016 this figure went down to 4.6%.

Last year the same number went further down to 'only' 4%.

In other words, our societal values are getting an long-overdue 'update' and consanguineous marriages are being frowned upon.

I'm born into a partly very conservative family and even those individuals with a highly religious background have all married people from outside our family tree.

It's impressive because I'm witnessing a major shift in our society.

 
Last edited:
.
Bro you guys need to keep the economic activity going. Population coffins literally destroy future growth. How will you keep an ever increasing elderly population afloat?
By increasing the productivity of your companies and production facilities. We don't need masses of people to build an economy which provides us with job opportunities, income and wealth. Also, I'd rather share our available resources with 100 people instead of 1000.

We have an abundance of humans and a shortage of jobs.

I really understand the underlying mindset of your arguments but times simply have changed.
 
.
Back
Top Bottom