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Turkey records nearly 1.2M live births in 2019 Total fertility rate was 1.88 last year, below popula

dani191

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Turkey records nearly 1.2M live births in 2019
Total fertility rate was 1.88 last year, below population’s replacement level of 2.10
Tuba Şahin |13.05.2020

thumbs_b_c_21f7635dd50a3c4300085fc673be3402.jpg




ANKARA

The number of live births in Turkey was nearly 1.2 million in 2019, down from 1.25 million previous year, the country's statistical authority reported on Wednesday.



TurkStat data showed that of those live births 51.3% were boys and 48.7% were girls.



Total fertility rate, the average number of live births that a woman would have during her reproductive life, was 1.88 children last year while this was 1.99 in 2018.



"This showed that fertility remained below the population's replacement level of 2.10," TurkStat said.



The crude birth rate --the number of live births per thousand population-- stood at 14.3 in 2019.


The highest age specific fertility rate was in 25-29 age group with 122 per thousand last year.


The adolescent fertility rate, meaning that the average number of live births per thousand women in 15-19 age group, was 17 last year.
https://www.aa.com.tr/en/life/turkey-records-nearly-12m-live-births-in-2019/1839323
 
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Very bad news for Turkey and Turks. Once you fall below 1.9 TFR, it becomes almost impossible to come back at normal levels for a sustained period of time.

Moreover, look at the data....Turkish areas already have extremely lower 1.58 TFR as a whole---while Kurdish areas have ~3 TFR. Within a decade, Kurds will form a much larger percentage of Turkey's working-age population (could be up to 35%-40% depending on how things go in coming years).

Experts hoped may be its a temporary dip due to economic crisis in Turkey happening for past few years----but increasingly, it is looking like more and more permanent.

Below replacement fertility will be the biggest obstacle in Turkey's industrialization, economic rise, and innovative prowess. In industrialized countries---more population is linked with more innovation (as more young, educated people = faster innovation under right circumstances). That's why U.S took the lead over European competitors and that's why China is rising SO fast right now

@dani191 Why do you think Israel has such a healthy birth rate? Even discounting the Haredim (which are a deadweight of sorts and don't really count)---Israel's birth rate is 2.3-2.5 kids woman (Overall its 3 when you add Ultra-Orthodox Haredims too). Israelis aren't particularly religious---so what in your view contributes to this advantage of Israel?
 
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Very bad news for Turkey and Turks.
It's very good news. Almost always this is a milestone only achieved by highly developed countries. Whereas the least developed have the highest rates. Thus Turkey now belongs in the elite category of countries like Japan, Scandanavia etc.

Quality over quantity. Stabilty over chaos.
 
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It's very good news. Almost always this is a milestone only achieved by highly developed countries. Whereas the least developed have the highest rates. Thus Turkey now belongs in the elite category of countries like Japan, Scandanavia etc.

Quality over quantity. Stabilty over chaos.
We can fill the gap easy when the time comes,we have more then 10 million Turks all over the world.
A Turk never loses his nationality,he can always claim his passport when he wants,children grandchildren included.
We can also import Turkics like Tatars,Circassians,Kirgiz,Türkmen,Azeri and Pakistani,Afghans etc.
 
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Ever seen black Turks?
They are hardcore Turkish nationalists,the worst kind.
As you know,we dont care for color.

They are small in size wait for the flood

he fertility rate in Turkey last year remained below the standard replacement level for a population, which is 2.1%, signaling that the aging trend will continue for the country’s population.

According to Turkish Statistical Institute (TurkStat) data released Wednesday, the fertility rate, which refers to the average live births a woman has between the ages of 15 and 49, dropped to 1.88 last year from 1.99 in 2018.

Statistics reveal that the number of live births stood at 1.18 million in 2019, and 51.3% of the live births were males, while 48.7% were females.

Southeastern provinces continue to have the highest fertility rates in the country. Şanlıurfa had the highest at 3.89 for 2019, followed by Şırnak with 3.37 children and Ağrı with 3.16 children. The lowest rate, on the other hand, was recorded again in the Black Sea province of Gümüşhane, with 1.33 children, and it was followed by the western provinces of Kütahya and Edirne with 1.34 children.

The highest age-specific fertility rate continued to be seen in the 25-29 age group, shifting from the 20-24 age group in the early 2000s. The adolescent fertility rate or the average number of live births per thousand women in the 15-19 age group, meanwhile, dropped to 17 per 1,000 last year from 19 per 1,000 in 2018.





The crude birth rate, which indicates the number of live births per thousand of the population, also dropped to 14.3 per 1,000 from 15.3 per 1,000 in 2018. Last year, the province with the highest crude birth rate was also Şanlıurfa with 29.5 per 1,000, followed by Şırnak with 25.8 per 1,000. The lowest crude birth rate province was Edirne with 8.8 per 1,000.

The statistics also revealed that the rates are still below the 28 European Union countries. While the highest fertility rate in the bloc is seen in France with 1.88, Malta has the lowest rate with 1.23 children.

Experts in Turkey attribute the gradual slowdown in fertility rates to urbanization, a rise in the number of women pursuing education and their active participation in the workforce, which indirectly leads to the postponement of births.

A recent study also revealed that the number of children in Turkey continues to fall. According to TurkStat statistics on children published in 2019, children, aged 0-17, now make up 22.8 million of the population, or 27.5%, compared with 29.4% in 2014. A graphic accompanying the report reveals that Turkey’s image as a young country may be history in the coming years. The child population was 45% in 1935, in the 12th year of the fledgling Republic of Turkey, and future projections show a steady decline in the coming years. It is estimated that their share of the general population will fall to 27% at the centenary of the Republic and by the end of this century, it will fall further to 19%. Still, Turkey fares well compared with European countries in which the child population’s proportion is 18.6% on average.

will grow up alone and two will be rivals, so have at least three. This common piece of advice to newlywed couples on the number of children they should have by President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan is being partially heeded according to recent data.

Eurostat, the top statistics agency of the European Union, indicates that Turkey was way ahead of Europe in terms of fertility rates and births. Eurostat revealed Tuesday that figures for 2017, the latest year with available data, show the total fertility rate in the European Union was 1.59 births per woman. This is a slight decrease from 1.60 in 2016 and far lower than 2.07 births per woman in Turkey for 2017. More than 1.2 million babies were born in Turkey that year, while only 5.07 million babies were born in all 28 EU member states.

Turkey has suffered from historical lows in fertility rates in recent years, but fares well compared to other countries. The government strives to boost the rates amid gloomy projections of an aging population in a few decades. The country is still classified among "young" countries, with steady growth in its population, while aging concerns for EU countries have reached alarming levels, so much so that some countries are turning to foreign workers to boost their workforce.

An improved health care system is credited with a boost in increasing life expectancy at birth, and Turkey has started to take measures to counter the "aging" threat. Ambitious to sustain economic growth, the country has to juggle efforts to expand the workforce and address challenges, especially for women having children while remaining in the workforce. Erdoğan's folksy advice aside, the government has rolled out several incentives and policies in the past decade, from one-time cash payments for each newborn that increases with every successive birth in the family to covering daycare expenses of working mothers.

Experts in Turkey attribute the gradual slowdown in fertility rates to urbanization, a rise in the number of women pursuing education and their active participation in the workforce, which indirectly led to the postponement of births.





As for Europe, the highest fertility rate is 1.9 births per woman in France, followed by Sweden with 1.78 percent, Denmark with 1.77 percent, Ireland with 1.75 percent, and England with 1.74 percent. Malta had the lowest birthrate at 1.26 percent, followed by Spain at 1.31 percent, Italy at 1.32 percent, and Greek Cyprus and Greece, both at 1.35 percent.

The statistics body also noted that the average age in the European Union for having a first baby is 29.1 years of age.

Falling fertility rates is a global phenomenon according to the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), whose report on fertility published last year shows it has been in decline since the 1960s in almost every country. The UNFPA report ties it to a wide range of factors from changing work patterns, prosperity, better health and nutrition, greater survival rates of newborns and children and wider access to education for women in Europe.
 
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By all means. But make sure they are secularists. Simple test. At point of citiznship required to hug statue of Ataturk and swear loyalty which is all recorded. That would be like garlic to draculas ...!

If I was the Turkish Immigration Minister I would focus on getting folks from the former USSR republics in the Caucasus,Central Asia and folks from the former Yugoslavia Azeris from Northern Iran, Pakistanis,Somalis and Gulf Arabs back in the line lol

By all means. But make sure they are secularists. Simple test. At point of citizenship required to hug statue of Ataturk and swear loyalty which is all recorded. That would be like garlic to draculas ...!

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/How_happy_is_the_one_who_says_I_am_a_Turk
 
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Pakistanis
Pakistani's are fine. They would make great contribution in fields like medicine, science and business or even military. Look at UK. However it is the scumbag Islamists who screw things up. So have life sized statue of Ataturk that they have to hug and bow to. That should weed out the zombies ...

Look at UK. Doctors, military , police, business and even as politics with Sadiq Khan mayor of London etc.

NHSdoctorsNationality.png
 
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Pakistani's are fine. They would make great contribution in fields like medicine, science and business or even military. Look at UK. However it is the scumbag Islamists who screw things up. So have life sized statue of Ataturk that they have to hug and bow to. That should weed out the zombies ...

I could envision a day Pakistani diaspora folks living in the US and UK could migrate to Turkey as it's a balance of both east and west jokes aside
 
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We can fill the gap easy when the time comes,we have more then 10 million Turks all over the world.
A Turk never loses his nationality,he can always claim his passport when he wants,children grandchildren included.
We can also import Turkics like Tatars,Circassians,Kirgiz,Türkmen,Azeri and Pakistani,Afghans etc.

Interesting that you have not included India and China.
 
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They are small in size wait for the flood

he fertility rate in Turkey last year remained below the standard replacement level for a population, which is 2.1%, signaling that the aging trend will continue for the country’s population.

According to Turkish Statistical Institute (TurkStat) data released Wednesday, the fertility rate, which refers to the average live births a woman has between the ages of 15 and 49, dropped to 1.88 last year from 1.99 in 2018.

Statistics reveal that the number of live births stood at 1.18 million in 2019, and 51.3% of the live births were males, while 48.7% were females.

Southeastern provinces continue to have the highest fertility rates in the country. Şanlıurfa had the highest at 3.89 for 2019, followed by Şırnak with 3.37 children and Ağrı with 3.16 children. The lowest rate, on the other hand, was recorded again in the Black Sea province of Gümüşhane, with 1.33 children, and it was followed by the western provinces of Kütahya and Edirne with 1.34 children.

The highest age-specific fertility rate continued to be seen in the 25-29 age group, shifting from the 20-24 age group in the early 2000s. The adolescent fertility rate or the average number of live births per thousand women in the 15-19 age group, meanwhile, dropped to 17 per 1,000 last year from 19 per 1,000 in 2018.





The crude birth rate, which indicates the number of live births per thousand of the population, also dropped to 14.3 per 1,000 from 15.3 per 1,000 in 2018. Last year, the province with the highest crude birth rate was also Şanlıurfa with 29.5 per 1,000, followed by Şırnak with 25.8 per 1,000. The lowest crude birth rate province was Edirne with 8.8 per 1,000.

The statistics also revealed that the rates are still below the 28 European Union countries. While the highest fertility rate in the bloc is seen in France with 1.88, Malta has the lowest rate with 1.23 children.

Experts in Turkey attribute the gradual slowdown in fertility rates to urbanization, a rise in the number of women pursuing education and their active participation in the workforce, which indirectly leads to the postponement of births.

A recent study also revealed that the number of children in Turkey continues to fall. According to TurkStat statistics on children published in 2019, children, aged 0-17, now make up 22.8 million of the population, or 27.5%, compared with 29.4% in 2014. A graphic accompanying the report reveals that Turkey’s image as a young country may be history in the coming years. The child population was 45% in 1935, in the 12th year of the fledgling Republic of Turkey, and future projections show a steady decline in the coming years. It is estimated that their share of the general population will fall to 27% at the centenary of the Republic and by the end of this century, it will fall further to 19%. Still, Turkey fares well compared with European countries in which the child population’s proportion is 18.6% on average.

will grow up alone and two will be rivals, so have at least three. This common piece of advice to newlywed couples on the number of children they should have by President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan is being partially heeded according to recent data.

Eurostat, the top statistics agency of the European Union, indicates that Turkey was way ahead of Europe in terms of fertility rates and births. Eurostat revealed Tuesday that figures for 2017, the latest year with available data, show the total fertility rate in the European Union was 1.59 births per woman. This is a slight decrease from 1.60 in 2016 and far lower than 2.07 births per woman in Turkey for 2017. More than 1.2 million babies were born in Turkey that year, while only 5.07 million babies were born in all 28 EU member states.

Turkey has suffered from historical lows in fertility rates in recent years, but fares well compared to other countries. The government strives to boost the rates amid gloomy projections of an aging population in a few decades. The country is still classified among "young" countries, with steady growth in its population, while aging concerns for EU countries have reached alarming levels, so much so that some countries are turning to foreign workers to boost their workforce.

An improved health care system is credited with a boost in increasing life expectancy at birth, and Turkey has started to take measures to counter the "aging" threat. Ambitious to sustain economic growth, the country has to juggle efforts to expand the workforce and address challenges, especially for women having children while remaining in the workforce. Erdoğan's folksy advice aside, the government has rolled out several incentives and policies in the past decade, from one-time cash payments for each newborn that increases with every successive birth in the family to covering daycare expenses of working mothers.

Experts in Turkey attribute the gradual slowdown in fertility rates to urbanization, a rise in the number of women pursuing education and their active participation in the workforce, which indirectly led to the postponement of births.





As for Europe, the highest fertility rate is 1.9 births per woman in France, followed by Sweden with 1.78 percent, Denmark with 1.77 percent, Ireland with 1.75 percent, and England with 1.74 percent. Malta had the lowest birthrate at 1.26 percent, followed by Spain at 1.31 percent, Italy at 1.32 percent, and Greek Cyprus and Greece, both at 1.35 percent.

The statistics body also noted that the average age in the European Union for having a first baby is 29.1 years of age.

Falling fertility rates is a global phenomenon according to the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), whose report on fertility published last year shows it has been in decline since the 1960s in almost every country. The UNFPA report ties it to a wide range of factors from changing work patterns, prosperity, better health and nutrition, greater survival rates of newborns and children and wider access to education for women in Europe.
They are not imports,they are the children of the Ottoman Empire.
Real black Turks.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Afro-Turks
 
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China TFR is woefully low than India and they are gonna have an ageing crisis soon and its starting right now

Uighurs use to have one of the highest TFR in China. Muslims in India too have higher TFR.

Chinese Official Floats Plan to “Stabilize Fertility” Among Some Uighurs
The plan seems bound to further raise tensions in Xinjiang.
BY ALEXA OLESEN | AUGUST 8, 2014, 3:52 PM
chinese-official-floats-plan-to-stabilize-fertility-among-some-uighurs
xj_small5.jpg

AFP/Getty Images


Ordinary Chinese social media users have reacted with nonchalance and even some rejoicing to news that Xinjiang, a far western region beset with bloody ethnic unrest, may tighten its family planning policies to curb population growth among minority Uighurs. The plan, part of a blueprint for restoring peace and stability to the violence-wracked region, was announced by Xinjiang’s top Communist Party official, Zhang Chunxian, in an essay published July 31 in party journal Seeking Truth. On top of pledges to boost education and tackle unemployment, Zhang wrote that Xinjiang must "implement a family planning policy that is equal for all ethnic groups" and must "lower and stabilize fertility at a moderate level," although he gave no details or timeline for the changes. Uighurs are a Muslim, Turkic-speaking people numbering a little less than half of Xinjiang’s 22 million people.

The plan, if implemented, seemed bound to ratchet up already spiraling tensions between Uighurs and Han Chinese, who make up more than 90 percent of China’s total population. Alim Seytoff, president of the Washington-based Uyghur American Association, told Foreign Policy that there was "pure outrage" in the Uighur exile community over Zhang’s remarks. Seytoff said he expected Uighurs would interpret new birth restrictions "as proof that the Chinese government’s final solution for the Uighur people is to eventually eliminate them."

China, which famously limits most urban couples to just one child, has more lenient family planning policies for minorities. The government currently allows urban Uighurs to have two children and rural Uighurs to have three. Some Han Chinese resent the special treatment. On China’s Twitter-like Weibo, several users welcomed the remarks of Zhang, who is Han, writing there should be just one birth policy for all ethnicities in China. Some also betrayed inter-ethnic animosity. One user wrote that the government should go further and "encourage Han births" in Xinjiang. In response to concerns that fewer Uighur babies might trigger an aging problem in Xinjiang, another web user wrote in response: "Xinjiang won’t be facing instability because of aging, but because the Han population [there] will get smaller and smaller compared to the Uighurs."

In fact, Uighurs today make up less than half the population in Xinjiang and the number of Han Chinese has grown rapidly, a result of in-migration rather than a high Han birthrate. It’s been a big shift. In 1949, 82 percent of Xinjiang was Uighur, and the population was mostly concentrated in the southern part of the region. By 2010, when China released its last nationwide census, only 46.4 percent of Xinjiang’s population was Uighur, and northern Xinjiang had become the economic and political center of the region. Meanwhile Han Chinese, spurred by government programs encouraging migration to the region, rocketed from 6.2 percent of the population in 1949 to 39 percent in 2010. The capital, Urumqi, is now a majority Han city.

Zhang’s essay did not mark the first time Xinjiang officials have raised the alarm over Uighur population growth. Uighurs have the country’s highest birth rate, with an average of just over 2.0 children born to most Uighur women, while the national average is around 1.8. In February 2006, Nur Bekri, the deputy party secretary of Xinjiang, said that Xinjiang’s population controls would have to be tightened or any economic gains in the region would be erased. But no radical changes came as a result, and Bekri didn’t go as far as to say that Uighurs should be subject to the same strict limits that Han face. That is apparently what Zhang is prescribing now.

Zhang’s latest announcement comes as China is loosening family planning rules across the country. China has limited most urban couples to just one child for more than 30 years but in November of last year, the government tweaked the rules to allow more Han Chinese the chance at a second child. Now couples with one parent who grew up an only child are allowed to have two children.

Zhang’s essay also comes on the heels of Xinjiang’s worst spasm of ethnic violence in five years. According to a government account, police gunned down 59 knife-toting terrorists near the Silk Road city of Kashgar on July 28 after they launched a premeditated attack on government and police buildings, killing 37 civilians. Exile groups say the people shot by police were protestors, not terrorists. There have been numerous other attacks blamed on Uighurs, including a slashing rampage and suicide bomb attack at a railway station in the capital of Urumqi that left three dead and 79 injured. Exile groups say repression is behind the growing violence and point to rules that bar Uighur civil servants from wearing Muslim dress or fasting during Ramadan. The Beijing government says foreign terror groups are infiltrating the region and spurring the unrest.

Depending on how vigorously it is pursued, an attempt to tighten birth policies in the region might act as a spark in the region’s tinderbox atmosphere. Research by Barry Sautman, a professor of social science at Hong Kong University, shows that previous attempts to tighten family planning rules for Uighurs resulted in riots in Urumqi in 1983, and Uighur student demonstrations both in Urumqi and Shanghai in 1985. Yi Fuxian, an obstetrics researcher at the University of Wisconsin and a vocal critic of the one-child policy, told FP he didn’t think the Xinjiang government would actually enforce a single policy for all ethnic groups because the "cost would be too high." Yi said Uighurs would revolt if subject to the same birth limits that Han face and there would be greater violence and instability. "I think maybe Zhang Chunxian said this to help release some Han Chinese anger" over the unequal policy, Yi said. "I think it’s meant to console the Han."


Alexa Olesen was a foreign correspondent for the Associate Press in Beijing for eight years and has been a reporter for Foreign Policy. She now works for ChinaSix, a New York-based consulting firm.

https://foreignpolicy.com/2014/08/0...an-to-stabilize-fertility-among-some-uighurs/
 
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