With the oldest population in the world and the lowest birth rate, Japan's crisis is just beginning. |
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In that period, the business birth rate actually fell from 30.4 to 27.5 per 10,000 adults. |
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The birth rate is the lowest in Europe, reflecting deep pessimism about the future and the astonishingly high cost of housing. |
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If they were relevant, the birth rate among the poor would be significantly lower than among better off families, which has never been the case. |
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A drop in population had to impact the birth rate which, in turn, would have an impact on future population figures. |
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In the election it announced that it would provide tax refunds for first time babies with a view to encouraging a lift in the birth rate. |
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The increasing demand is linked to a rising birth rate in the area bucking the national trend, which shows a decline. |
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Statistics from the period show that the birth rate for Turks was about two percent compared to just above zero for Bulgarians. |
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In the last few decades all these countries estimated a decrease in their birth rate, but they also registered stabilization. |
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With a declining birth rate and an ageing population, the first minister says they need fresh talent. |
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In general the death rate is four for every thousand, while the birth rate is twenty-nine for every thousand. |
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The birth rate in the U.S. is much higher than in European countries like Sweden and Switzerland. |
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One could also speculate on the link to the low birth rate, which usually is ascribed to an under-performing economy. |
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A declining birth rate not only means fewer kids but also an ageing population. |
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One decade after the dismantling of the USSR and the restoration of capitalism, the death rate of Russia exceeds its birth rate. |
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A slowdown in the birth rate has led to a dramatic decrease in the number of younger people in the workforce. |
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The birth rate peaked in March 1947, long before government intervention took effect. |
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To account for differences in population size, demographers often use the concepts of crude birth rate and crude death rate. |
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In England and Wales, it is thought the crude birth rate did not begin to decline until the 1870s. |
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We have a declining birth rate and increased life expectancy, along with a marked reluctance to pay into a private pension plan. |
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Russia's collapsing birth rate feeds fears that Siberia's emptiness will be infiltrated from the teeming nations to the south. |
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Utah has the nation's highest birth rate, but the lowest incidence of unwed teenage mothers. |
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Nine months after the blackout the city was said to enjoy a baby boom, with a small surge in the birth rate. |
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This was a fate shared by many women in this time, a result of a high birth rate and poor natal care. |
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The United States will stabilize its population by 2040 at the current birth rate. |
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Britain and other European countries face being underpopulated because of the low birth rate. |
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The birth rate has been described as exceptional and has delighted park rangers, who would normally expect only two joeys to be born annually. |
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The birth rate increased for the third consecutive year following nearly a decade of decline. |
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She asserts that the community's death rate has risen sharply, while the birth rate has crashed. |
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If France has a problem with its birth rate, couldn't it just allow more people to immigrate? |
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The French death rate was falling, but so too was its birth rate, at an unusually rapid rate. |
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As in the case of the crude birth rate, this rate is expressed per thousand. |
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Despite this, the report assumes no policy action to boost population growth by encouraging an increase in the birth rate or increasing immigration. |
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The Canadian population is aging, the birth rate is low and growth is increasingly reliant on immigration. |
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This is why demographers prefer to use fertility rates rather than the crude birth rate. |
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Their low birth rate and long life span make rubber boas vulnerable to human activity. |
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After years of a falling birth rate, Sweden, Denmark, Norway, Britain, and France are showing signs of a reverse while others are learning from their example. |
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The spectacular growth in the birth rate in the postwar years, known as the baby boom, drew increasing attention to the issue of education. |
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A falling birth rate, gradual ageing and dying out of population are the most serious problems today. |
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Ireland, for example, has a birth rate of 21.5 per 1,000, twice the EEC average. |
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A low birth rate and longer average life expectancy mean that our society is ageing. |
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It is calculated by subtracting the crude death rate from the crude birth rate. |
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Indeed, the average birth rate in the province went from among the highest to the lowest in the developed world. |
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In addition, given the extremely high birth rate, there is a rapidly increasing number of young people to educate. |
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A higher birth rate among some of the groups is likely another factor underlying the recent growth in numbers. |
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The dropping of the birth rate in many countries will lead to relatively few people of working age. |
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Many demographic experts attribute the declining birth rate in recent years chiefly to young people's reluctance to marry because of heightening job insecurity. |
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Perhaps it is no coincidence that such dire statistics on childbearing were published in the wake of a flurry of government warnings about the falling birth rate. |
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This rate stood at 83 births per 1,000 women of childbearing age and the gross birth rate at 20 births for every thousand inhabitants. |
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The crude birth rate may also be adjusted for age-sex composition by the indirect method when age-specific birth rates for the particular population are lacking or defective. |
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His document looks at the country's declining birth rate and the continuing brain drain and presents an apocalyptic vision of the future in Scotland. |
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Students find the crude birth rate and crude death rate figures for certain countries from the website. |
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Melodramatic telenovelas have helped bring down the birth rate and stimulated literacy in Mexico and Brazil. |
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One factor Albert is disinclined to think is a reason for the decline in birth rate is an increase in abortions. |
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At a public meeting held for residents, numerous people raised the point of what would happen if the birth rate rose and there were no places for the children. |
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France tries to boost its falling birth rate with more money for mothers. |
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Thus, the general fertility rate is a better basis to compare fertility levels among populations than are changes in the crude birth rate. |
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In Argentina, the crude birth rate, which was already fairly low in the early 1950s, has continued to fall since then. |
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The decline in the crude birth rate has resulted from low birth rates combined with an aging population. |
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To the right of each table name you can see the crude birth rate that would be calculated for the base year if you selected that table. |
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However, it has the same drawbacks as the crude birth rate where international comparisons are concerned. |
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The birth rate is dropping, the mortality rate is going up, and the net loss in Russia's population amounts to a million a year. |
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Such forecasts need to be taken with a bucketload of salt: tiny shifts in today's birth rate extrapolated over 90 years produce huge changes. |
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A NEW television commercial describes the sharp drop in Kazakhstan's birth rate and then implores viewers to do something about it. |
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Two types of rates are used to assess natality: the crude birth rate, and fertility rates. |
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In countries like Iran where contraception was subsidized before the economy accelerated, birth rate also rapidly declined. |
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But Beveridge alluding to the problem of an overall declining birth rate, argued that even the flat rate would be eugenic. |
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The United States has a birth rate of 13 per 1,000, which is 5 births below the world average. |
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Because all the children had a share in the family's property, there was a declining birth rate. |
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In recent years, Poland's population has decreased due to an increase in emigration and a decline in the birth rate. |
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In addition, longer maternity leave would act as a spur to childbearing in Europe, which has a falling birth rate and ageing population, she said. |
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An infant born to a woman under the age of 18 is more likely to be premature, have a low birth rate, and die in the first month of their life than an infant born to a mature woman. |
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Among Travellers there was a relatively large number of infants and children and a relatively small number of older people, as a result of a high birth rate and low life expectancy. |
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We must reduce the footprint in Canada and in other countries by getting by with less, lowering the birth rate, etc. There are all sorts of fronts on which we should be working hard. |
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In the sixties, Romania's birth rate fell significantly, a fact which is generally attributed to the country's economic problems and the despondent mood among the population. |
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A cyclical shortage has been intensified by the unexpected rise in the UK birth rate, something we should put to one side here because there are management issues hampering staff at MK General. |
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This is especially true in New Brunswick where the population is graying at a faster rate than that of other provinces, and the provincial birth rate is lower than the Canadian average. |
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The downward trend in the population growth rate is accounted for by the decline in the birth rate, which is greater than the decline in the mortality rate. |
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Data from the United Nations shows that population growth, measured as the crude birth rate minus the crude death rate, has gone from about 15 per 1,000 people in 1980 to below 5.5 per 1,000 people today. |
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China has implemented a strict birth control policy, particularly since the late 1970s, and the crude birth rate has fallen sharply, by much more than the crude death rate. |
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In the former GDR, a pronatalist policy temporarily had modest success in boosting the birth rate in the mid-1970s, but the population declined there for two reasons: emigration and low fertility. |
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However, Bhat provided reverse survival estimates of the crude birth rate from the 1991 census data. |
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In a way, wealth is even a contributor: Western lifestyles and expectations have spread into Russia and, by European standards, the birth rate is low but not outlandishly so. |
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These are chiefly middle-aged females working as home helps and caring for the elderly: a migratory phenomenon which produces no family groups, and therefore does not increase the birth rate. |
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For example, a herd that is too large will overgraze its range and begin to decline as the herd birth rate and the condition of the individual animals declines. |
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Secondly, the demographic transition, a combination of a lower birth rate, a lower new-born mortality rate and higher life expectancy involving an ageing of the population. |
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They ran computer simulations in which eusocial queens competed against solitary ones, and found that eusociality increases a queen's birth rate eightfold and reduces the probability of her death tenfold. |
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The European demagogues choose to overlook the need for a boost to the European birth rate and for a family policy worthy of the name and the urgent need to adjust our labour market to demand in order to curb unemployment. |
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Research required in this field ranges from identifying demographic facts, causes and trends, to the worryingly low birth rate in many Member States and the impact of still-rising average life expectancy. |
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The country has zoomed towards a first-world birth rate. |
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Germany has the world's lowest birth rate. |
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The second set of policies is designed to reinforce the family so that people can have more children, given that numerous countries have a very low birth rate. |
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With the drastic decline in the birth rate, the challenge today is to keep these young people in the regions and to attract others to come and settle there. |
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The media is constantly producing surveys warning about the danger of a declining birth rate and the demographic ageing of the population of Europe. |
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As we know, the birth rate in Canada has gone down steadily. |
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This situation is due to a matrix of factors, including slow economic growth, an ageing population and declining birth rate, amplified by emigration. |
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The birth rate is reducing in all countries, Europe is getting older. |
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While Iran's birth rate has been brought in check, a large part of the population is comprised of young people who are looking for jobs and a comfortable standard of living. |
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In 2013, the highest teenage birth rate was in Alabama, and the lowest in Wyoming. |
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The decrease in birth rate fluctuates from nation to nation, as does the time span in which it is experienced. |
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Stage Three moves the population towards stability through a decline in the birth rate. |
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The decline in death rate and birth rate that occurs during the demographic transition may transform the age structure. |
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The birth rate has recovered in recent years from a low level around 2000, and is now comparable to the European average. |
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The government is implementing a number of programs designed to increase the birth rate and attract more migrants. |
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In 2009 Russia experienced its highest birth rate since the dissolution of the Soviet Union. |
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This trend continued even as Puerto Rico's economy improved and its birth rate declined. |
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During the period between 1885 and 1908, as many as eight million Congolese died of exploitation and disease while the birth rate dropped. |
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On the other hand in countries where people scrunt to live, the birth rate is high. |
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The falling birth rate has prompted the Iranian military to increase the length of the tour of duty for draftees by three months. |
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Since the 1970s, Germany's death rate has exceeded its birth rate. |
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Its median age is higher than the global average due to its low birth rate, high life expectancy, and relatively high rate of emigration among younger people. |
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The Russian Ministry of Health and Social Affairs predicted that by 2011 the death rate would equal the birth rate because of increase in fertility and decline in mortality. |
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First, the birth rate of new urban dwellers falls immediately to replacement rate, and keeps falling, reducing environmental stresses caused by population growth. |
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Since 2000, Spain has experienced high population growth as a result of immigration flows, despite a birth rate that is only half the replacement level. |
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In stage 5 of the demographic transition, a country encounters misfortune as a whole this is because the death rate becomes higher than the birth rate. |
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Table 1 shows that marital status tends to explain the greatest proportion of change in both the general fertility rate and the crude birth rate during the period under study. |
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Hosting the World Cup or a home team's win tends to increase male births and total birth rate, and heart attacks are more common when home teams are on the field. |
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However, it may take several generations for a change in the total fertility rate to be reflected in birth rate, because the age distribution must reach equilibrium. |
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However an increasing birth rate and higher levels of inward migration to Scotland have reversed the decline and contributed to the recent population growth. |
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The growth of population in Macau mainly relies on immigrants from mainland China and the influx of overseas workers since its birth rate is one of the lowest in the world. |
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Brazil's population increased significantly between 1940 and 1970, because of a decline in the mortality rate, even though the birth rate underwent a slight decline. |
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The content saw an emphasis on the birth rate and marriage rates. |
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Regular visits from doctors, and access to modern medical care raised the birth rate and decreased the death rate, causing an enormous natural increase. |
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