Number Of Infants Born In Japan Expected To Have Increased In 2006, Health Ministry Data Says

The number of infants in Japan born was expected to have increased in 2006, marking the first rise in six years, according to Japanese government data released last week, Reuters/Independent Online reports. According to the Ministry of Health Labour and Welfare estimates — which are based on preliminary figures of births and deaths registered at Japanese municipal offices — about 1,086,000 likely were born in the country in 2006, an increase of about 23,000 infants from 2005. The ministry last month said the country’s fertility rate — or the average number of infants born per woman during her lifetime — for 2006 is expected to be 1.29 infants per woman, compared with 1.26 infants per woman in 2005. According to ministry officials, the increase in the number of births is attributed partially to a recovery in incomes and an improvement in the economy. The ministry added that the fertility rate is expected to start dropping again this year (Reuters/Independent Online, 12/31/06). If the country’s total fertility rate declines, Japan’s population is projected to shrink from the current 127 million to fewer than 90 million in 2055, BBC News reports (BBC News, 1/1). The government has said the potential decline to the country’s fertility rate could be detrimental to the country’s economic growth prospects and could lead to higher social welfare costs (Reuters/Independent Online, 12/31/06). According to BBC News, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has pledged to introduce policies that will prevent drops in birth rates, and last month he proposed a draft budget that seeks to increase support for childcare services (BBC News, 1/1).

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