jueves, 1 de febrero de 2018

Taiwan records lowest growth rate ever

Taiwan records lowest growth rate ever





Taiwan records lowest growth rate ever

The job of 'mother' needs to be more highly esteemed.
Shannon Roberts | Jan 30 2018 | comment 1 



While it didn’t actually shrink like the populations of both Shanghai and Beijing, Taiwan's population grew by just 0.13 percent in 2017.  It was the lowest annual growth rate in Taiwan's recorded history according to its internal affairs department’s Saturday report, and it has been in constant decline since 1984. 
It is estimated by Taiwan’s National Development Council's that its population will stop growing altogether in 2024 after peaking at 23.74 million, and will then stagnate before beginning to decline.  Once Taiwan reaches this "super-aged" phase, it is predicted that the population will begin to decline considerably to somewhere between 17 million to 19.49 million in the latter half of the 21st century. 
Linda Arrigo, an American-born academic and member of the Population Association of Taiwan, commented on some of reasons for the huge decline in births back in 2011, the year Taiwan’s birth rate fell to the world’s lowest:

Having been here in the 1960s as a teenager, I’ve seen this tremendous change from people wanting to have four or five children to now the young women I know, many of them say they want one or no children at all.  And it’s hard to understand the motivation except that professionals want a life of their own.
…Young people’s motivations are so much changed. They say that having children is prohibitively expensive. They don’t want to spend the labor. They are also very much pressed in their professional jobs, as teachers, as computer programmers,”
The fertility rate in Taiwan has stood at 1.17 in recent years, but authorities plan to offer more incentives to further boost the birth rate.  According to a recent survey, the financial burden is the main reason that working couples say they choose not to have a child.  The survey also found that 23 percent of people say that they have experienced discrimination in the workplace due to getting married or pregnant, having to give up their career, shift or move to other posts.
In an interview with CNA, the minister of Health and Welfare, Chen Shih-chung said that the Taiwanese government puts great importance on children.  Increased child-care programs and maternity leave are on the agenda in order to encourage young couples to have babies.  An increased focus on the importance and esteem of the job of 'mother' is also much needed.


MercatorNet

January 31, 2018

Of all the things that, a decade ago, one might have predicted would become a political issue, who would have thought of the wedding cake? But it has, and no less an institution than the United States Supreme Court is deliberating about one right now. That particular cake, like a few others in recent years, was one that did not get made for a same-sex couple who requested it.

If you want to refresh your memory about what exactly is the issue you can revisit this article we published in December. Our lead article today, however, is not about the controversy as such, but why both sides see the wedding cake as so significant. In a long but fascinating essay that we have republished from The Family In America journal, sociologist D. Paul Sullins explains the symbolism and history of this ceremonial confection in its three-tiered, white-iced, topped by a figure of the bride and groom form. Apparently this owes a lot to Queen Victoria, whose wedding banquet

“presented the British populace with a cake of outsized dimensions that definitively crossed the line from food to spectacle. The cake’s bottom later, more than 10 feet in circumference and weighing over 30 pounds, served primarily as the base for a pedestal upon which stood three distinct tiers, topped by an elaborately carved scenario of Britannia blessing the Queen and her bridegroom, Prince Albert.”
There are some pictures with Dr Sullins article, which I highly recommend as background to one of the most unpredictable court cases of all time.

Carolyn Moynihan
Deputy Editor,
MERCATORNET
The history and significance of the wedding cake
By Paul Sullins
The familiar ritual of cutting the cake embodies deep and powerful symbols
Read the full article
 
Handmaids’ tales from the world of legalised prostitution
By Pauline Cooper-Ioelu
‘Sex work’ is a myth that belongs in Gilead.
Read the full article
 
Love in the time of the internet: from emotions to emojis.
By Ilaria Di Paolo
Only face to face can we discover the other person.
Read the full article
 
Unattended package causes confusion
By Jane Fagan
Eugenia Lincoln is not easily amused.
Read the full article
 
What might explain the unhappiness epidemic?
By Jean Twenge
Put down your phone or tablet and go do something – just about anything – else.
Read the full article
 
Who is Jordan Peterson, anyhow?
By Kevin O’Rourke
The ideas of the controversial Canadian psychologist have been 30 years in the making
Read the full article
 
Jordan Peterson’s rules against chaos
By Harley J. Sims
Toughen up, be honest, take responsibility – for a start.
Read the full article
 
Taiwan records lowest growth rate ever
By Shannon Roberts
The job of 'mother' needs to be more highly esteemed.
Read the full article



MERCATORNET | New Media Foundation

No hay comentarios: