Faced with an ageing population and one of the world's lowest birth rates, the South Korean government is urging its citizens to make more babies.
Among the "emergency measures" to
enthuse its populace into starting, or growing, their family are financial
support for couples seeking fertility treatment and extra paternity leave for
parents welcoming a second child.
The Korea Herald reports that the measure were
announced by the ministry of health and welfare following a 5.3 per cent drop
in new born babies in the first five months of the year compared to the same
time in 2015.
Health minister Chung Chin-youb said:
“The government prepared such emergency measures
with a desperate mind that we must exert all possible efforts to block the
current low birth rate that continues to decline”
But these still fall short of transforming the
sense of defeat felt by youths into a sense of hope, or to console the working
mums who shed tears during our policy debate.
The BBC reports that
South Korea's birth rate has plummeted since the 1960s despite billions of
pounds worth of government spending.
The government will spend up to £44m on the new
measures, according to the Korea Times,
although there are fears that state policy will not be able to overpower a
corporate culture seen as "family-unfriendly".
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