population

No COVID, fewer babies in Hungary

Family children

Preliminary data show that 7,673 children were born and 10,016 people died in September 2022, while the number of live births fell by 2.6 percent in the October 2021-September 2022 period year on year, and deaths decreased by 8.1 percent, the Central Statistical Office (KSH) said on Friday.

In the past 12 months, 89,724 children were born, down 2.6 percent from the same period of last year, while 144,998 people died, 8.1 percent fewer than in the previous year. The natural population loss came to 55,274 compared with 65,682 in the same period of last year, a drop of 16 percent. Between October 2021 and September 2022, 66,840 couples were married, 7.2 percent fewer than in the previous year.

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Read alsoLife expectancy has fallen dramatically in Hungary

Life expectancy has fallen dramatically in Hungary

coronavirus_mask_hungary_street_budapest

Hungary is one of the countries in Europe where the average life expectancy of people has fallen the most, according to a study published in the journal Nature Human Behavior.

It is important to clarify at the outset that life expectancy is a measure that researchers use to summarise a country’s mortality patterns in a given year. This calculation is based on all-cause mortality, so it is not dependent on the accuracy of COVID death records and can give a broader picture of how the pandemic has affected mortality.

COVID-19

The coronavirus pandemic has caused a global decline in life expectancy that has not stopped since the epidemic. Life expectancy improved year on year before 2020 in the 29 countries studied by a team of researchers from the University of Oxford and the Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research, but there was a more than a one-year decline in average life expectancy in 2019 and 2020, and to a lesser extent in 2020 and 2021, reports Pénzcentrum.

The phenomenon was also observed worldwide, from Eastern Europe to the United States.

Weathered the pandemic well

While Europe and the world have seen a significant decline, northern European countries and Switzerland have weathered the pandemic exceptionally well:

  • In Norway, average life expectancy increased by 1.7 months,
  • in Sweden by 0.1 months,
  • Finland 0.3 months,
  • 0.4 months in Denmark,
  • In Switzerland, the fall in average life expectancy is 0.5 months below the 1-month mark.

These are the countries where life has been shortened the most

Life expectancy fell most in Bulgaria, by 43 months (3.6 years) in 2021 compared to 2019. Slovakia follows with 33.1 months, where people’s life expectancy has been shortened by 2.7 years, and the United States comes third with 28.2 months (2.35 years).

Hungary and CEE region

Hungary is in the top half of the list, in 6th place: more than two years , (24.6 months) shorter life expectancy compared to 2019.

The Hungarian figures are also among the worst in the region. Although Poland, apart from Slovakia, has seen a greater decline in average life expectancy, the populations of other neighbouring countries have not suffered as much from the pandemic years.

The average person in the Czech Republic and Croatia lost 21.9 months (1.8 years) and 21 months (1.75 years) respectively. But Austria escaped with a 7.6 month (0.6 year) setback.

From a Hungarian perspective, however, perhaps more worrying than the raw numbers is that while many countries managed to reverse the downward trend between 2020 and 2021, in Hungary the trend only got worse.

Hungary census to start on October 1 – UPDATE

Budapest Hungary people citizen street competitiveness eu

The next census of the Hungarian population will start on October 1, the head of the Central Statistical Office told a press conference on Monday, adding that participation in the national survey was mandatory.

Residents will have until October 16 to fill in the questionaires online. Census officers will contact people who have failed to do so between October 17 and November 20, Gabriella Vukovich said. Between November 20-28, the questionnaires will be available at the municipalities, for those who were unavailable for the census officers, she added.

Participation is mandatory for everyone who is a resident of Hungary on October 1, she added.

The census, conducted every 10 years, yields a “snapshot” of the country, with details about the living and working conditions, health and religious denomination of Hungarians, Vukovich said.

The information collected is crucial in determining local demand and for making decisions for the future, Vukovich said.

At the same time, this will be the last census where data is collected with the active contribution of the population, Vukovich said. The next will be completed using government databases, she said.

The census will contain new questions on the energy efficiency of houses and the digital literacy of residents. Responding to questions on health, disabilities, ethnic and religious identity, the respondents’ mother tongue or the language used in the household will be voluntary, she added.

The questionnaires will be available in 20 languages at www.nepszamlalas2022.hu.

New abortion rule in Hungary: the mother giving up her baby must listen to the baby’s heartbeat

maternity baby mother pregnant

A new addition has been made to the abortion application form: obstetrician-gynaecologists examining women seeking an abortion must now record that a clearly identifiable indication of fetal vital signs has been presented to their patients.

The amendment to the decree implementing the law on the protection of foetal life was published in Tuesday’s Hungarian Gazette (Magyar Közlöny) with the signature of Interior Minister Sándor Pintér.

The decree will enter into force on 15 September.

The “indicator of the functioning of fetal vital functions” is the heartbeat, so from Thrusday on

all pregnant women must listen to the fetus’ heartbeat before deciding to have an abortion, according to the newspaper.

According to statistics, there were 23.5 abortions for every 100 live births in Hungary in 2021, compared to 30 in 2018 and almost 45 in 2010.

The price of an abortion is set by the Family Protection Service. There are currently four different tariffs: 28 540 HUF (EUR 72) to free of charge. The free option is available for people in social need.

DK demands explanation for new abortion rules

The opposition Democratic Coalition has called on the government to explain why it had tightened abortion rules.

Judit Földi Ráczné, a party board member, told an online press briefing on Tuesday that Interior Minister Sandor Pinter, “inspired by the hard-right”, had decreed changes without any form of preliminary consultations.

Before every abortion, pregnant women must now obtain a certificate attesting to hearing their baby’s heartbeat, she said, adding that the real reason for the new rule was to introduce a document which is time-consuming to acquire; women waiting for an abortion may “slip beyond” the deadline within which it is still possible.

DK, she said, wanted to know how such an important decision could be introduced in the form of a ministerial decree, bypassing parliament.

“In several countries restrictions like this were the starting point of a process which culminated in the ban of abortions,” she added.

State Audit Office: too many Hungarian women have a degree

Graduation at SZOTE university

According to an analysis, the significant overrepresentation of women in higher education may cause demographic problems. As the time spent with getting a degree results in difficulties finding a partner, it can lead to the risk of decrease in fertility. Therefore, the Hungarian State Audit Office expressed worries about too many women having a degree.

More women are admitted to higher education than men

According to Népszava, the State Audit Office published their „Pink education” analysis this July. In the analysis, they write that every year between 2010 and 2021, more women were admitted to higher education than men. In the fall semester of the 2022 academic year, the proportion of women will already be 54.5 percent. In addition, male students are more likely to drop out. But this tendency is visible at secondary schools, which more girls attend than boys. This is a very important data as 70 percent of full-time students come from secondary schools.

The representative questionnaire research was conducted around the time of the parliamentary election with the participation of 700 parents and teachers, writes Telex.hu. They wanted to find out whether the Hungarian education system provides equal opportunities for boys and girls.

Demographic problems

The Hungarian State Audit Office is worried about the overrepresentation of women in higher education. They believe that the probability of women getting married and thus the chance of having children decreases. This can even lead to demographic problems, they say. According to the analysts, an educational strategy is needed to prepare for a successful independent adult life, reports 444.hu. They would like to conduct deeper research into the consequences of the phenomenon and to define measures depending on the results.

Teachers are also mainly women

According to the ÁSZ, the feminisation of the teaching profession may have contributed to the shift in gender ratios, as 82 percent of teachers are women. According to the majority of those interviewed, women posess qualities that are necessary for teaching. These are emotional, social maturity, diligence, listening to words, tolerance for monotony, good verbal and written expressiveness. Schools usually put a greater emphasis on these than on boys’ mathematical, technical abilites. The “punishment” of masculine qualities in schools causes mental problems for boys, who cannot develop their special abilities and affects their diligence, writes Népszava.

Good news: Hungary’s population loss decreasing

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Preliminary data show that 8,113 children were born and 10,320 people died in July 2022, with the number of live births decreasing by 1.2 percent and deaths by 8.8 percent in August 2021-July 2022 compared with the same period a year earlier, the Central Statistical Office (KSH) said on Friday.

The natural population loss was 2,207 in July this year as against 2,108 in July 2021, KSH said. In July 2022, 7,976 couples tied the knot, down 17 percent from July 2021.

In the past 12 months, 90,670 children were born, down 1.2 percent from the same period of last year, while 143,970 people died, 8.8 percent fewer than in the previous year.

The natural population loss came to 53,300 compared with 65,991 in the same period of last year, a drop of 19 percent.

Between August 2021 and July 2022, 68,336 couples were married, 7.9 percent fewer than in the previous year.

elderly woman at home
Read alsoWhy do Hungarians die early?

The exact dates of census in Hungary revealed

Hungary Trianon Budapest

A census will be conducted in Hungary starting in October, the Central Statistical Office (KSH), said on Friday, noting that it is recruiting 28,000 volunteers as census officers.

The census from October 1 to November 28, will be the 16th such survey in Hungary to determine the exact size of the population as well as to provide information in preparation for decisions concerning national and local developments, KSH said.

Under a 2018 law, residents are obliged to answer the census questions and return them online or to give information personally to the officers visiting homes.

The officers will use tablets to record the answers,

the KSH said, adding that this will be the country’s first census to be conducted electronically.

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Read alsoBudapest to become empty? – the reasons behind population decline

Number of Hungarians still decreasing

Family Család Baba Baby

Preliminary data show that 6,484 children were born and 10,852 people died in April 2022, with the number of live births increasing by 2.7 percent and deaths decreasing by 6.7 percent in May 2021-April 2022 compared with the same period a year earlier, the Central Statistical Office (KSH) said on Friday.

The natural population loss was 4,368 in April this year as against 8,564 in April 2021, KSH said noting that the third wave of the Covid-19 epidemic resulted in a high number of deaths last April.

In April 2022, 5,007 couples tied the knot, down 0.8 percent from April 2021.

In the past 12 months, 89,875 children were born, down 2.7 percent from the same period of last year, while 144,633 people died, 6.7 percent fewer people than in the previous year.

The natural population loss came to 54,758 compared with 62,700 in the same period of last year, an increase of 13 percent.

Between May 2021 and April 2022, 70,255 couples were married, 3.4 percent more than the previous year.

Read alsoHungarians love to get married, leading the EU

CDI assembly adopts Fidesz, Slovenia SDS proposal concerning EU demographic strategy

The general assembly of the Centrist Democratic International in Brussels on Friday adopted a resolution proposal, tendered jointly by Hungary’s ruling Fidesz and Slovenia’s SDS party, concerning Europe’s demographic strategy, Orban’s press office said in a statement.

According to the proposed resolution, Europe’s population is declining in a global comparison. While the current 27 members of the European Union accounted for 12 percent of the global population in 1960, that ratio has now dropped to 6 percent, and is expected to further fall, to below 4 percent by 2070.

The draft also points to the continent’s ageing population, with the ratio of people over 65 having now reached 21 percent in the total population, and the ratio of children under 15 having dropped to 15 percent.

Its shrinking and ageing population means that Europe is losing its influence, competitiveness, economic power and room for manoeuvre “in a new world order”, the document says.

Through the resolution, the CDI wants to express its concern about a serious demographic crisis, which it sees as one of the gravest of current problems facing the continent.

According to the draft, there are a number of possible solutions to reverse the population decline, such as building family support systems, helping families expecting babies and reinforcing communities.

The CDI is “deeply convinced” that family policy is a national competency and “should stay so”.

Migration should not be used as a tool to resolve demographic challenges, the proposal said, and called on the EU to “consider demographic aspects first in all its policymaking and build mechanisms to counterbalance the impacts of migration on demographics”.

Read alsoCDI assembly adopts Fidesz, Slovenia SDS proposal concerning EU demographic strategy

Hungarian population in severe decline? – Latest population statistics

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The rate of natural decline in the population decreased by 17 percent in August, with the number of births increasing by 0.4 percent and deaths decreasing by 2.7 percent compared with the previous year, the Central Statistical Office (KSH) said on Thursday.

In the period, 8,178 children were born, 36 more than in August in the previous year, while 9,678 people died, 271 fewer than in the same period in 2020.

The number of marriages fell, with 9,249 couples tying the knot, 12 percent less than in the same period in 2020. KSH noted, however, that there was one weekend less in August this year than in the same month of last year.

Number of suicides dramatically increased in Hungary!

In the Jan-Aug period, there were 60,620 births, down 533, or 0.9 percent, from the same period a year earlier. The number of deaths was 100,591, 16,070 (19 percent) more than in Jan-August 2020.

The rise in deaths and the drop in the birth rate means that the rate of natural population decline was up by 71 percent compared with the same period last year, KSH said.

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Read alsoWorrying data – Hungary tops this sad EU ranking

Budapest amongst the top 20 most ambitious entrepreneurial cities in the world!

budapest downtown city center hungary spring

A brand new study by Dojo has revealed which cities in the world are the most ambitious when it comes to starting their own business.

Many of us aspire for success, but does where we live have anything to do with our business ambitions? Card machine provider Dojo has created a worldwide index of the most business ambitious cities, using

5 fundamental factors which contribute to entrepreneurial ambition:

  • Number of new businesses registered
  • Cost of a business start-up as a % of GNI per capita
  • Gross Domestic Product (GDP) per capita
  • Percent of the population with access to education
  • Google search volumes for starting a new business queries

Hungary’s capital, Budapest, is named the 20th most ambitious city in the world, with a population of over 1.7 million and an ambition index score of 282 out of 500.

Over 24,252 new businesses registered in the city over a year proving Budapest is an ideal choice for savvy entrepreneurs.

The city also had a 10% increase in Google searches for “how to start a new business” in the city.

London took the crown

as the most ambitious city in the world for those looking to start a business. With over 664,974 new businesses registered in the city and over 4,400 Google searches for “how to start a new business” – it’s no surprise that the UK capital came out top, scoring 481 out of 500 in the index.

With a population of over 9.4 million, the UK capital is a melting pot of cultures, creativity and access to infrastructure – a winning formula for ambitious entrepreneurs.

Sydney came second

with an index score of 402 out of 500. New businesses have been thriving in Sydney, with 235,654 new businesses registered there – proving that ambitions show no sign of slowing in ‘The Emerald City’.

Over the past 12 months, there was also a 52% increase in searches for “how to start a new business” amongst Sydney’s occupants and a 100% increase in those searching for “how to fund a new business”.

South Africa’s port city of Cape Town came third,

scoring 384 out of 500. With a population of 4.7 million, the city is home to many of Africa’s most innovative designers and artists – creativity flourishes amongst the natural beauty of the city.

That, paired with incredibly low costs for those looking to open up a new business could be why 376,727 new businesses opened up in the city in 2018.

Annual competitions in the city such as the FNB Enablis Business Plan initiative also provides over R10 million (£501.3K) to start-ups every year. A lot of support is given to SMEs in the city as they employ around 70%-80% of the working population in Cape Town.

For the full index of business ambitious cities, please visit HERE.


LLCs are one of the most popular business entities in the United States, as they are easy to establish and can be formed in any state. A state like Georgia is booming with opportunities for entrepreneurs. All it takes is following a few simple rules and regulations, and an LLC can be up and running in no time. Click here to learn about LLCs in Georgia and how they are formed.

Budapest to become empty? – the reasons behind population decline

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Settlements in the agglomeration of Budapest are becoming more and more popular among Hungarians, while the population of the capital has been decreasing for five years. What is the reason behind and which are the most popular settlements in the agglomeration of the capital?

Since 2016, the population of the Hungarian capital has been steadily declining. Last year, Budapest’s population decreased by almost 13,000, as well as fewer people lived in the county seats in January 2021 than a year ago.

The pandemic can partly explain this; as a result of which, the demand in the real estate market has significantly changed. As the Hungarian news portal Index reports, the urban population tried to “escape” to the countryside and Hungarians were very active in searching for properties in the agglomeration of ​​larger cities, resulting in remarkable changes in the size of the population of some Hungarian settlements. Another reason might be the completion of house constructions; several families could move into their new homes built in the agglomeration of large cities.

In 2020, the most significant growth in the population was measured in Rajka,

located on the Slovak-Hungarian border, where the population has increased by almost 60% in one year, reaching more than 6,000 people. In addition, a remarkable increase could be observed in the population of Érd, Gyömrő, Nagytarcsa, Délegyháza, Veresegyház, Dunaharaszti and Szigetszentmiklós, with an annual growth of 300-600 people until the beginning of this year.

Changes in the population size also affect property prices. In Budapest, property prices started to increase in 2014, which also intensified the migration of Hungarians from the capital to the agglomeration. However, the rapid price increase in the real estate market of the Hungarian capital almost stopped in 2020 by the emergence of the pandemic. Similarly, a slower pace could be experienced in other big cities while the increasing population in the agglomeration has generated remarkable growth in the property prices of these areas.

The highest property price growth in the agglomeration of Budapest was measured in Érd,

where the average prices per square meter in the supply market increased by 23% to EUR 1590. Rajka follows with an annual increase of 20% (EUR 1400/m2) and Gyömrő with a yearly growth of 14% (EUR 1555/m2).

According to the expert of ingatlan.com, the Hungarian real estate market is expected to recover this year and presumably will close a much better year than 2020.

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Read alsoProperty prices in Budapest are expected to rise this Summer

China’s population growth slips to lowest ever

In 2016, China replaced its one-child policy - initially imposed to halt a population explosion at the time - with a two-child limit.

China’s population grew at its slowest since the 1950s as births declined, sowing doubt over Beijing’s ability to power its economy as it succumbs to the same ageing trends afflicting developed nations like Japan.

With growth having ebbed ever since a one-child policy was introduced in the late 1970s, the 2020 results of the country’s once-a-decade census on Tuesday showed the population of mainland China increased 5.38% to 1.41 billion. That was the least since modern census-taking began in 1953.

Data showed a fertility rate of 1.3 children per woman for 2020 alone, on par with ageing societies like Japan and Italy. The shrill alarm for China’s policymakers is that the world’s second-biggest economy may already be in irreversible population decline without having first accumulated the household wealth of G7 nations.

The number meant China narrowly missed a target it set in 2016 to boost its population to about 1.42 billion by 2020, with a fertility rate of around 1.8. In 2016, China replaced its one-child policy – initially imposed to halt a population explosion at the time – with a two-child limit.

The sharp deterioration in demographics will fuel pressure on Beijing to ramp up incentives to couples to have more children – incentives that have thus far failed to offset the impact of career choices and cost-of-living challenges that couples say have deterred them from starting extended families.

“From the trend of population development in recent years, the population growth will continue to slow in the future,”

said Ning Jizhe, head of the National Bureau of Statistics, speaking after the release of the census results.

“China’s population will reach a peak in the future, but the specific time is still uncertain. It is estimated that China’s total population will remain at more than 1.4 billion in the near future,” Ning said.

2030 PEAK?

In recent months, China’s state media has been increasingly bleak on the outlook, saying the population may start to shrink in the next few years. The United Nations predicts the number of people living in mainland China will peak in 2030 before declining.

But in late April, the Financial Times newspaper said the population actually fell in 2020 from a year earlier, citing unidentified people familiar with the matter.

The 2020 number was actually slightly higher than the 1.4005 billion in 2019 estimated in a smaller official survey released in February last year.

One bright spot in the data was an unexpected increase in the proportion of young people – 17.95% of the population was 14 or younger in 2020, compared with 16.6% in 2010.

From 2016 to 2019, the annual birth rate mostly declined with the exception of 2016. Last year, China recorded 12 million births, Ning said, sharply down from 14.65 million in 2019.

“It doesn’t take published census data to determine that China is facing a massive drop in births,”

said Huang Wenzheng, a demography expert at the Center for China and Globalization, a Beijing-based think-tank.

Even if China’s population didn’t decline in 2020, the expert said, “It will in 2021 or 2022, or very soon.”

‘COST OUTRAGEOUS’

Urban couples, particularly those born after 1990, value their independence and careers more than raising a family despite parental pressure to have children.

Surging living costs in China’s big cities, a huge source of babies due to their large populations, have also deterred couples from having children.

According to a 2005 report by a state think-tank, it cost 490,000 yuan ($74,838) for an ordinary family in China to raise a kid. By 2020, local media reported that the cost had risen to as high as 1.99 million yuan – four times the 2005 number.

“Having a kid is a devastating blow to career development for women at my age,” said Annie Zhang, a 26 year-old insurance professional in Shanghai who got married in April last year.

“Secondly, the cost of raising a kid is outrageous (in Shanghai),” she said, in comments made before the 2020 census was published. “You bid goodbye to freedom immediately after giving birth.”

As well as adding pressure on China’s working-age population and weighing on productivity, a diminishing pool of working adults will also test China’s ability to pay and care for an aging nation.

Citizens aged 65 and older accounted for 13.5% of the population in 2020, the data showed, far higher than the 8.87% registered for 2010.

Fudan University School Egyetem Iskola
Read alsoOrbán cabinet signs strategic deal with China’s Fudan University

Why do Hungarians die early?

elderly woman at home

Recent statistics show that the elderly constitute a smaller fraction of the population in Hungary than the EU average. Yet, the lifespan of Hungarians is shorter than what is typical of other nations in the EU. Read on for more details and some possible explanations.

Complications do not end with the defeat of the coronavirus – at least this is what the new Eurostat statistics imply, writes Növekedés.hu. The members of the EU will also have to face issues arising from negative demographic processes to varying degrees. The ageing population and the reduced willingness to bear children are among the most significant factors engendering such changes. The high percentage of the elderly in the population necessitates increased government expenditure. Additionally, the standard of living can only be improved by boosting productivity.

The recent data provided by Eurostat suggest growth in the number of people over the age of 65 in certain countries of the EU. The increase is estimated to be around 3%, and the average proportion of people aged 65 or over in each nation is approximately 20.6%.

The size of this age group is the largest in Italy in proportion to its population (23.2%), whereas Hungary is below the EU average, with 19.9%.

Italy is followed by Greece, Finland, Portugal, and Germany, with about 22% of their populations being 65 or older.

It should be noted, however, that part of the reason for the smaller percentage of the examined generations in Hungary might be the low life expectancy of Hungarians.

While the French and the Italian live for 83 years on average, Hungarian people generally tend to live for 76 years.

It will be interesting to see how the data may change in the aftermath of the pandemic.

In a previous article exploring the topic, we have mentioned some possible reasons why Hungarians do not live long lives. One of the gravest problems was discovered to be the unhealthy lifestyle that a considerable portion of people leads, more specifically, excessive drinking and smoking. You can read more about the potential causes for the shorter lifespans of Hungarians and the differences in the data among the counties in Hungary here. Lower income may also negatively affect the expected length of life, more about this here.

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Read alsoFrench, Spanish regions record longest life expectancy in EU

Family Minister: V4 setting ‘demographic example’ to Europe

novák katalin with kids

Countries of the Visegrád Group “see it as their mission to set an example to Europe in terms of demography”, Katalin Novák, Hungary’s minister without portfolio in charge of family affairs, said on Thursday.

Speaking at an online conference attended by her Slovak, Czech, and Polish counterparts, Novák said that the four countries “refuse to give up their future and culture”.

No European country sees a sufficient number of births, and “though their population is growing, that growth comes from mass immigration,” she insisted.

“We, central European countries, will demonstrate that development could be based on internal resources, that we can cope with the demographic crisis and become a prosperous, young region within Europe,” the minister said. She said it was important for the group to preserve the composition of their population. “Ensuring growth while preserving culture, history, and traditions will be one of the most important challenges in the next decades,” she said.

Novák said that in the past ten years the fertility rate had improved in all four countries, adding that she was proud of that ratio growing the fastest in the region. She also said that in the past 10 years the number of marriages had doubled and the number of divorces fell by 30 percent.

The Hungarian government considers subsidies to families as an investment, Novak said, adding that the amount used for that purpose was 2.5 times as much as in 2010, currently nearly 5 percent of GDP.

Family subsidies are tied to employment, she said, adding that the government also encouraged any initiative promoting a family-friendly approach.

This year, the government has also launched “the largest first home buyer scheme in Hungary’s history” aimed at ensuring that “everybody should have a decent home of their own to expect and then raise their children”, Novák said.

Daily News Hungary
Read alsoHungary family policy aimed at slowing population decline, says minister

Hungary births up in 2020

baby-hungary newborn

Carrying on from the trends seen in the 2010s, Hungary saw a rise in the number of births in 2020 in spite of the novel coronavirus epidemic, Gabriella Vukovich, the head of the Central Statistical Office (KSH), said on Wednesday.

In an interview with public broadcaster Kossuth Radio, Vukovich attributed the rise in births to the policies targeting demographic growth implemented by the government in recent years.

Hungary’s fertility rate also increased over the past decade, Vukovich said, noting that

it had risen from 1.23 in 2011 to 1.56 in 2020.

She added, however, that the country’s population has been steadily declining since the 1980s.

This, she said, could only be remedied by combinations of policies designed to promote demographic growth.

Vukovich praised the family policies introduced by the government in recent years, saying they were designed to help families find the best ways to have as many children as they want.

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Read alsoHungarian government has no plans to change abortion laws

Hungarian government has no plans to change abortion laws

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Hungary’s government has no plans to change the country’s abortion laws, Katalin Novák, the minister for family affairs, has said.

“This is not on the agenda at all,” Novák said, adding that she believed in “the triumph of common sense” rather than changing the rules. Thanks to advances in technology, science today knows a lot more about the life of the foetus inside the womb, Novák said during a discussion streamed live on Facebook late on Monday, adding that she believed this would eventually result in “greater respect for the life inside the womb”.

Asked about ways women considering abortion could be convinced to keep their child, the minister said church- and foundation-run organisations were available to help troubled expectant mothers, while members of family protection services were also prepared to help women make their decision.

“It is perhaps partly thanks to this that the number of abortions [in Hungary] has gone down by 30 percent over the past ten years,” she said.

Novák added, at the same time, that there was more work to be done when it came to increasing awareness and accessibility to different forms of assistance for mothers.

Hungary’s population decline slowed in the first nine months of the year as the number of births increased by 3.7 percent and the number of deaths decreased by 3.9 percent compared with the same period last year, read more HERE.

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Read alsoHow many children are born outside marriage in Hungary? Shocking result!

Hungary family policy aimed at slowing population decline, says minister

Daily News Hungary

Hungary’s family policy aims to slow the country’s population decline by encouraging young couples to have children and to support those couples who have entered parenthood, Katalin Novák, the minister for family affairs, said at the second Hungarian-Polish Forum on Tuesday.

Addressing a panel discussion, the minister said the biggest challenge facing Europe concerned demography.

The matter of raising children has its own challenges during the novel coronavirus pandemic, Novák said, arguing that grandparents, for instance, were not able to be as active in looking after children as they normally would.

The Hungarian government moved to extend the period of eligibility for childcare benefits as early as the first wave of the pandemic, she said.

Concerning education, she said the government was trying to continue on with in-person classes for younger students for the time being, arguing that it was better for children’s intellectual and physical development.

Though the switch to online classes worked out well in the spring, only universities and secondary schools above the eighth grade will return to that arrangement for now,

Novák said.

She noted that the government was not cutting back on, but rather expanding its family benefits during the economic slowdown caused by the pandemic.

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Read alsoSurvey finds that Hungarian parents think that it is acceptable to slap their kid